The Weather Mostly cloudy, local n somewat colder Wedne say. Thursday cloudy and cold./ Y A6fig3 ati rwmww Editorial Undergraduate Cots Makes A False Step VOL. XLIV No. 112 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 7, 1934 PRICE FIVE . _ __ _ Faculty To Be Guests At Houses Student-Faculty Relations Committee Plans Series Of Dinner-Discussions 20 Fraternities To Take Part In Plan Representative Committee Formulates Plans For Carrying Out Project Plans for the inauguration of a series of special faculty dinners at various fraternities as a step to- wards establishing a closer relation- ship between undergraduates and professors was formulated yesterday afternoon at a meeting of the recent- ly-formed committee on student and faculty relations. The project calls for each of a group of fraternities entertaining a selected faculty member on Wednes- day nights for dinner with the guest conducting an informal discussion after the meal. The series is sched- uled to begin Wednesday, March 14, according to Robert A. Saltzstein, '34, president of the Union and a mem- ber of the committee. Although a complete list of the pro- fessors who are co-operating in the plan has not yet been formulated, more than 35 have already signified their willingness to take part. Twenty fraternities have also expressed a de- sire to participate. Members of the committee further decided that, inasmuch as the achievement of a closer contact is a task which will require a long period of time, the body should be made permanent and should be responsible to the Board of Directors of the Union. They selected Saltzstein as leader, and provided that hereafter the Union president shall by virtue of his office be chairman .. Members of the committee include, in addition to Saltzstein, Prof. James K. Pollock and Prof. Charles F. Remer of the literary college, Prof. John S. Worley of the engineering college, Prof. William A. McLauglin of the Union Board of Directors, Ed- ward W. McCormick, '34, secretary of the Union, and Thomas K. Connellan, '34, managing editor of The Daily. Announce Plan For Continuing .ParleyGroups Discussion Units Will Be Permanent; To Select Student Chairmen Continuation of the fouridiscus- sion groups which met during the Spring Parley last week-end was defi- nitely decided upon last night at a meeting of the student committee which had organized the Parley. Final arrangements for the con- tinuation of these groups on "Capi- talism and Social Change," "Sex and the Family," "War and the Student," and "Religion and the Church," in- cluding times and places for the first meetings, will be announced within a few days. Student chairmen also will be named by Clinton D. San- duskey, '34, chairman of the Parley. A large measure of discretion is to be allowed the chairman of each sec- tion and the group itself as to how At will arrange its discussions, what program it will adopt, and what fac- ulty or other leadership it will in- vite, Although there was some differ- ence of opinion, it was generally felt, in view of the interest shown in some of the groups during the recent Par- ley, the fact that discussion and questions were nowhere near ex- hausted, and interest in similar con- tinuation groups a year ago, that there is a place on campus for such discussion groups. Athena, Alphya N', Will Debate Charm Lady! Can you be big and be al- luring? Alpha Nu says no; Athena dis- agrees. They'll fight it out at 7:30 nm. today in the Alpha Nu Room. Woman Linked Wit h Dillinger Escape Plot House Group Favors Cut In Labor Hours Company U ions In Steel, Automobile Industries Ruled Illegal Industry Opposes Proposed Measure f1a Fights Against A Of Codes To Wages, Reduce Revision Increase Hours -Associated Press Photo Jail attaches at Crown Point, Ind., identified Alaine Burton (right), sweetheart of John Hamilton (left), escaped convict and Dillinger's former partner in crime, as the mysterious woman who had visited John Dillinger before his sensational escape. - 4 Collection For Library Fund To Start Today All Fraternities, Faculty, Students Giving 1 To Be Listed Thursday Collection of fraternity and so- rority donations and meetings of residents in Betsy Barbour House, Helen Newberry Residence, and Mar- tha Cook Dormitory for the purpose of deciding whether the residents wish to contribute as a group or not will occur today in the drive for funds to keep the Main Library open Sundays. Tryouts will meet at 5 p.m. in the Undergraduate Council rooms in the Union, where the money collected from houses and that donated in bal- lot boxes stationed on campus will be tabulated for the first time. Thursday morning all houses, in- dividual students, and faculty mem- bers who have contributed $1 or more will be listed in The Daily. The drive will continue throughout the week after which the total will be announced. It will take $375 to keep the library, exclusive of the stacks, open Sundays for the re- mainder of the year. Bursley emphasized last night that' the initiative for the campaign has come entirely from the students and has no connection with the faculty or the library administration. "The situation with regard to the Main' Library's closing on Sundays this' year was explained to us by library' officials and we were told that we could go ahead and see if we could get the necessary money to open it ourselves," Bursley said. Complaints against the library's closing have been numerous through-' out the year, and the students have expressed their desire to get the li- brary openasa place for study even if they have to do it out of their own pocketbooks, members of the Under- graduate Council said last night. Clearm House Tightens U POn SmallDeposits Local Banks To Increase Collection And Service Charges_ How to get their money from home most conveniently and least expen- sively and where to keep it inexpen- sively is the problem which many stu- dents are trying to solve as the re- sult of the Ann Arbor Clearing House Association r e g u la t i o n, effective March 1, which increased the charge by local banks for these services. Students who attempt to change their checking accounts to savings accounts will find that although there is no mention of the fact in the bulletin explaining the change, stu- dent savings accounts are rejected by all local banks on the grounds that they are "not really savings ac- counts." Similarly, the use of a safety de- posit vault to contain cash is pro- hibited by custom, although bank of- ficials refused to comment on how tha wiknow what, n rtof v ,,l_ Teachers iIccusCed Of Be rayng Thei Students By Seldes OLIVET, Mich.,. March 6--(IP) - Gilbert Seldes of NewYork, here for a visit with Joseph H. Brewer, pres- ident of Olivet College, said Tuesday that "college students have been be-e trayed by their professors." "Colleges have been guilty of lur- ing students to the campus by say- ing that college training guarantees high salaries," said Seldes. "Witht economy readjustment must comes< educational revision. Today colleges should tell students 'we can't make7 money for you, but we can make your life more interesting.' The colleget ought to foster contemplation rather1 than accumulation." Florida Debate Team Will Be rHereMonday Affirmative To Be Taken! By Michigan On Ques- tion Of Policy Of Japan As a climax to an extensive tourt of the Midwest the University of Florida's debating team will oppose the Michigan affirmative team at 8c p.m. Monday in the Grand Rapids Room of the League, according to James H. McBurney, Varsity debating coatch. Michigan's negative team will debate at 6:30 p.m. the same night at the Fort Shelby Hotel in Detroit against the Detroit Speakers Club as1 a part of a banquet given by the lat- ter organization. Against Florida Michigan will have an affirmative team composed of Jack Weissman, '35, and Samuel Travis, '34, while Edward Litchfield, '36, and Clinton Sandusky, '34, will take the affirmative side of the question in Detroit. Debate On Far East The question that both teams will debate on is "Resolved: That Japan Accept the Recommendation of the Lytton Commission as a Basis for Future Policy in the Far East." "Because this question deals direct- ly with the Sino-Japanese contro- versy in Manchuria I feel that a dis- cussion of it should be of vital in- terest to all foreign students on the; campus," Mr. McBurney stated. The two debates Monday will be the last of the preliminary contests before the newly innovated Confer- ence Debating Tournament which is tb be held Friday and Saturday, March 16, and 17 at Evanston. Be-' sides the four men who will debate Monday night Mr. McBurney will probably choose two more debaters from the following men: Stewart Cram, '34, Edward Downs, '36, Lee C. .Shaw, '35, and Abe Zwerdling, '35. To Alternate Men Mr. McBurney stated that he will probably alternate the men, using some in one debate and other combi- nations in others. The affirmative and negative teams have three debates each. The affirmative team meets Northwestern, Ohio State, and Pur- due. The negative team will oppose Indiana, Wisconsin, and Illinois. The school with the highest average will win the Conference championship. Because of a Conference ruling that prohibits graduate students from en- tering the tournament three veterans from last year's debating squad will WASHINGTON, March 6. - () - A sledge-hammer blow was aimed at company unions by NRA today at one of its code revision sessions while at other gatherings industry raised objections against the proposal to further reduce the hours and increase the pay of its workers. With the declaration of Hugh S. Johnson, NRA aministrator, Wil- liam H. Davis, the organization's compliance directqr, appeared at the conference on code authorities and said that many of the plans for com- pany unions in the automobile and steel industries violated the law. Cites Workers' Rights Davis specifically mentioned in this connection Section 7-A of the Recov- ery Act which gives the workers the right to .join unions of their own choosing. Although witnesses at the labor hearing were cold toward the proposal to pare hours further, an indication of support for it in Congress was given today through approval by the House Labor Committee of the Con- nery Bill which would place indus- tries under NRA on a flat 30-hour basis. The Administration is dubious about the Connery measure and its chances of passingt're problematical but the Comm-ittee unanimously ap- proved of it. The a tion may prompt industry to a more favorable consid- erahroi of milder- NA suggestions. Charge No Action Witness after witness at the NRA open forum for complaints last week charged that many industrial con- cerns were acting as if Section 7 was not in existence and that NRA was doing nothing about it. - The insistence of several concerns upon the formation of company unions has caused strikes, exchanges between the National Labor Board and the companies involved and in one case a call by the board for the Department of Justice to proceed against the National Steel Co. at Weirton, W. Va. Davis said company unions which violated the law - and labor repre- sentatives charge all of them break the spirit of the act would be dealt with for the time being by the code authorities of the industries involved. President Roosevelt in opening the NRA code revision conference in- sisted that workers have the right of collective bargaining. Horak Elected Head Varsity Cheerleader Joseph Horak, '35, was elected head Varsity cheerleader for the coming year, according to an announcement by Thomas Roberts, '34, retiring head. The selection was made at a meeting last Friday of a committee composed of captains and managers of four major teams - baseball, bas- ketball, football, and track. Campaign To End Beer Ban Is Organized Committee Appointed To Get Out Wet Vote For April 2 Election Students, Faculty Are Represented Election Of Officers Is To Be Held Thursday Night; Will Plan Action Representatives from the faculty, the student body, and State Street merchants met last night in the Stu- dent Publications Building and or- ganized a committee to carry on the work of getting out the largest pos- sible vote for the repeal of the East of Division Street Beer Ban in the April 2 election. Norman Kraft was named as cam- paign chairman. The new organ- ization will be called the Citizens Charter Amendment Repeal League, and it was announced by the group that officers will be elected at the next meeting Thursday. A committee was elected to do the work of the campaign. Gilbert Bur- sley, president of the Undergraduate Council, B. B. Kelly, president of the Interfraternity Council, Del Pfrom- mer, president of the University of Michigan Republican Club, Thomas Connellan, managing editor of The Michigan Daily, and Dean Emmer- son, president of the University of Michigan Democratic Club compose the committee. Clinton Starbuck, proprietor of a State Street restau- rant, was named treasurer. The first activity of the committee, it was decided, would be to get re- peal voters who are qualified toevote registered. This must be done by March 12 if the voters are to cast a ballot in the April 2 election. The committee intends to collect money, to print handbills and pos- ters, to propagndizae its cause i the city newspapers, and to carry on all other incidentals necessary for a campaign of this type. A number of people have already pledged funds to the campaign, committee members said last night. Regular offices will be established, it is planned, and some member of the committee will be on hand dur- ing the day to explain the commit- tee's position on the beer question and to give whatever other help is needed to put over the drive. The next meeting will be held at 10 p.m. Thursday in the Student Publications Building, at which the campaign will be outlined and fur- ther details discussed. Philharmonic Program Will Be Broadcast The New York Philharmonic Sym- phony Orchestra will broadcast a special concert next Sunday over a nation-wide Columbia network, ac- cording to an announcement by the honorary committee, headed by Dr. Nicholas Murray Butler, president of Columbia University. Of special interest to students will be the rendition of Beethoven's "Mis- sa Solemis," under the direction of Arturo Toscanini. "As it is a choral work of lofty nature, we believe it a fit offering for the youth of this con- tinent, and we are directing it ex- pressly to students and alumni ev- erywhere," Eleanor Childs, chairman l of the Educational Committee, de- clared. "Union Opera Again Will Be Presented At Whitney Theatre In Ann Arbor's most colorful the- atre, the Whitney, scene of all but one of the Union Operas of past years, this year's show will be pre- sented late in April, according to an announcement issued yesterday. Beginning with "Michigenda" in 1905, the first of the annual all-male productions that became traditional events here, 23 of the 24 Operas given were opened at the.Whitney. The the- atre is considered to have brought to Ann Arbor residents and students more prominent shows and more fa- mous actors than many a theatre in larger cities, due to the fact that E. C. Whitney first tried out many of his plays here. Probably the most noted of these that played its first performance at the Whitney is "The Chocolate Sol- dier." Among noted actors who have played on the Whitney stage are May Robson, Ethel, John, and Lionel Barrymore, David W'arfield, Elsie Janis, George Cohan, Maude Adams, Mrs. Fiske, James K. Hackett, and Henry Miller. Opera officials stated that the show is being given at the Whitney again this year to continue the tradition that this be the scene of its opening, the theatre being almost inseparably linked with the show in the minds of those who have seen the Operas of the past. Draw p Plans To Permit Late Senior Hours Jury Giv Wyneko, Found Guilty Of Killing Her Daughter-In-Law On Operating Table Jury Out Only 36 Minutes For Verdic Dr. Wynekoop Receive Sentence Calmly; Sits In Wheel Chair CHICAGO, March 6. -(R)-Dr Alice Wynekoop tonight was convict ed of the slaying of her daughter in-law Rheta, and sentenced to 2 years in prison. The jury spent only 36 minutes i: actual deliberation. Dr. Wynekoop re ceivyed the verdict quietly as she sa in her wheel chair in the courtroon The jury received the case at 6:1 p.m., took an hour off for dinner and then announced at 7:45 p.m. tha it had reached a verdict. The doctor's 23-year-old daughter in-law was found slain on the nigh of Nov. 21, laist, on the operatin table in the basement of Dr. Wyne koop's office-home. The trial which concluded tonigh was the second, the first having beer declared a mistrial when Dr. Wyne koop's frail health made it impossibi to proceed. A decision in the case comes afte its having been a national sensa- tion for several months, during whis time charges appeared imminer against the husband of the murdere girl, Earle Wynekoop, because of cir- cumstances which at that tie we considered to implicate him. Two lif insurance policies and Wynekoop acquaintance with Priscilla Witti were thought to point to his connec Two Dillisger Guards Jailed For Collusion 25 Yea 1:30 4th' For A.M. Privileges For Year Women Aimed By Committee° Tentative plans for permitting sen- ior women with C averages to have 1:30 a.m. privileges Saturday nights are to be drawn up today in a con- ference between Ellen B. Stevenson, business' manager of University dor- mitories, and Grace Mayer, '34Ed., president of the League. When complete, the plans will be submitted to Dean Alice Lloyd, whose approval must be granted for the later permission to become effective. Today's conference is the result of the passing Monday by the League Board of Directors of a resolution fa- voring late permission Saturday nights for senior women of superior scholastic rating. It previously had been passed by the Board of Rep- resentatives. Technical difficulties in night chap- eroning at the dormitories are prac- tically the only points to be cleared up in today's conference, it was in- dicated last night. Dean Lloyd has suggested that the problem be re- considered in the light of present ad- ministrative difficulties in the dormi- tories and said that "senior privileges that do not impair the system of night chaperoning are entirely justi- fiable." Choral Series Audience Hails Russian 'Cellist Official Says That He H Found Definite Evidene Of Malfeasance CROWN POINT, Ind., March 6. (A') -Two of the guards who su rendered to John Dillinger's wood gun were taken into custody toda but an intense man hunt failed produce the missing outlaw himse The guards, Deputy Ernest Blu and Turnkey Sam Cahoon, wi charged by Prosecutor Robert Estill with "aiding and abetting" E linger's escape. Assistant Attorney General Edwa Barce, investigating for the govern of Indiana, said the charge was bas on the failure of the jailers to res when Dillinger corralled all guards into his own cell and dro off in the woman sheriff's sedan. Barce said he had found "defin evidence of malfeasance." Cahoon was the first of Dillinge victims, when the toy pistol gunn began his amazing round up Saturd of the jail garrison. The turnk 'opened the door of Dillinger's c block, he admitted to the authorii later, without sending Dillinger a the other prisoners back into ti cells. At large in the corridor, Dillin sprang on Cahoon and with wooden pistol in the turnkey's ri ordered him to call Blunk. German Doctor Enters Medica' Effect Of Repeal Shows Itself In March Number Of Gargoyle) Piatigorsky Presents Final Concert Of Year; Three Encores Given Gregor Piatigorsky, violoncellist, appeared last night in the tenth and final concert of the 1933-34 Choral Union series in Hill Auditorium. An exceptionally enthusiastic audience caused him to give three encores in addition to the regular program. Mr. Piatigorsky opened the concert with the "Sonata in D minor" of An- drea Caporale. This was played in four movements. After the Caporale number, he presented Bach's "Suite in D major" for 'cello alone. Follow- ing this came the first encore, a second Bach number, the first move- ment of the "C Major Suite" for 'cello alone. The final number before the intermission was Mr. Piatigorsky's own arrangement of Weber's "Sona- tine." Saint-Saens' "Concerto in A mi- nor," in one movement, was the fifth piece presented. This was followed in order by Chopin's "Nocturne," Mous- sourgsky's "Hopak," "Intermezzo from Goyescas" by Granados, and Sarasate's "Zapateado." For his two final encores, Mr. Piati- gorsky chose to give Tschaikowsky's By ROBERT S. RUWITCH Enough things of a sensational na- ture have been happening in connec- tion with the new Gargoyle, and if the editors allowed us to be a bit "snoopy" we could relate such things as would make either your hair stand on end or your thumbs point down. But, since they won't let the secrets out, even if we want to, we can just tell you a sufficient amount of rumor to make you purchase a Gargoyle. Just by way of information, the March Gargovle will be on sale but the editors are mean and won't let us. That organization of public char- acters, which goes by the name of the Preposterous People Club, is going to take in another member, so if you want to see his portrait you know just where to look. While on that subject we might mention that there is a spicy anecdote connected with this group and we certainly would like to tell it if our editors would let us. Just to give you a hint, "Our Own Valentine" B. Windt decided he didn't care to wear the pledge pin to which Messrs. Bursley. Saltzstein, Connel- Faculty H e The second former German scl ar to come to the University year, Dr. Carl Felix List, was nounced yesterday as an instru in neuro-surgery on the staff of Medical School. Coming from the University Berlin, and holding the reputatio: being one of the better-known z in his field on the Continent, List will finish the present seme ,I