The Weather Rain today probably ending tomorrow morning. Colder to- night. Y 4t igan :4Ia ili : r Inland Review Makes Its Appearance.. . - 1 - VOL. XLIV No. 135 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, APRIL 3, 1934 PRICE FIVE CEN ___ r East Side Beer Ban Is Upheld Amendment Defeated By Majority Of Nearly 300 In Total Of 4,000 Votes Restricted Wards, Favor Status Quo Democrats Gain One Seat On Council; 3 Members Returned To Office By RALPH G. COULTER East side beer yesterday was de- feated at the polls by a margin of al- most 300 votes out of a total of 4,00( cast. The vote was 1,834 in favo to 2,128 against Despite the fact that it swept the second ward and had comfortable majorities in the third and fifth, the amendment to repeal the east of Di- vision Street beer ban failed to achieve even a majority. It had need- ed 60 per cent of all votes cast. It was noted that in all wards out- side of the restricted area the amend- ment was supported, and in all wards partially or totally within the pro- hibited area it was strongly opposed. Masten Is Elected Democrats made one gain in the aldermanic elections, Wirt Masten defeating William Angell, Republican, in the third ward by only five votes, D. C. Prochnow, Democrat, defeat- ed Harold Koch, the Republican, in the second ward, gaining a margin of 343 to 289. Daniel Jeannerett, So- cialist, was third with 125. Norman E. Nelson, Socialist can- didate, received 204 votes in the sev- enth ward but lost to the incum- bent Republican, Ald. Leigh Young, of the forestry school, who received 912 votes. Shaw Defeats Orr Wilfred B. Shaw, Republican, and director of alumni relations in the University, defeated his Socialist op- BEER VOTE BY WARDS New President And Secretary Of League - S' MAXINE MAYNARD BARBARA SUTHERLAND New Telescope Mirror Will Be Poured Today Yes First..............141 Second.............482 Third ... ............262 Fourth . ........... ..190 Fifth ................108 Sixth............207 Seventh, 1st Precinct 144 Seventh, 2nd Precinct .300 Totals.........1,834 No 259 268 196 225 62 366 248 504 2,128 ponent, Charles A. Orr, of the eco- nomics department, in the sixth ward by 441 to 94. In a close race in the fifth ward, Ald. Nelson Hoppe, Democrat, defeat- ed Burton A. Hilbert, Republican, 96 to 74. Republicans won by large majori- ties in the other two cases. Ald. Frank W. Staffan, incumbent in the fourth ward, received 218 votes to 152 for John Rainey, Democrat, and 50 for Merrill Case, Socialist, In the first ward F. W. Wilkinson gained 207 votes, Fredreick Schmid, Demo- crat, 123, and Neil Staebler, Socialist, 65. Heck Victor In Second The closest vote in the race for supervisors was in the second ward, where Frank Heck, Democrat, de- feated Herbert L. Kennett, Republi- can, by 388 to 356. J. C. Herrick, Democrat, won the supervisorship in the fourth ward with a vote of 220. His opponents were William Ager, Republican, with 151, and Maurice J. Wilsie, Socialist, 38. In the sixth and seventh wards Re-j publicans won the positions from So-I cialists by landslides. Harold D., Smith, director of the Michigan Mu- nicipal League, received 408 to the 120 of John L. Brumm in the sixth ward, and James Galbraith gained 921 to the 172 of Bert Doolittle in the seventh. The second amendment on the bal- lot, dealing with the transfer of the jurisdiction of building activities from the fire department to the city engineer's office, won by a large ma- jority, 2,900 to 935. Dean Bursley Is Given A Vote Of Confidence Five unopposed constables were Delegation Of Faculty Will * Witness Operation At Corning, N. Y. The mirror for the University's 84- inch reflector telescope, to be the ' third largest in the world, will be poured in Corning, N.Y., today. A delegation from the University * Observatory, composed of Dr. Heber D. Curtis, head of the astronomy de- partment, Dr. R. M. Petrie, also of the department, and Francis C. Mc- Math, curator of the observatory, left for Corning by automobile yesterday morning. The group will observe the pouring of the glass and will return to Ann Arbor either tomorrow or Thursday. Already postponed once, it was not officially decided until, early Monday whether or not the mirror would be poured today. A new feature of the mirror will be a coating of aluminum rather than the usual silver. After it sufficiently cools, the mir- ror will be -brought to Ann Arbor to be put into the frame of the tele- scope, butit will not be ready for use for some time.- Once completed, the new 84 inch reflector will be the third largest in the world. The largest will be the 200-inch disk of the California Insti- tute of Technology, the mirror of which was poured at Corning last week. The next in size is the 100- inch reflector at the Mount Wilson Observatory. I n sul l Awaits Extradition To United States Held In Turkish House Of; Detention; Case Studied By State Department ISTANBUL, April 2--(/P) -Sam- ual Insull ended another phase of hist flight from American justice in a Turkish prison today and awaited7 extradition to the United States., The most famous modern-day fu-1 gitive, wanted in Chicago on charges of embezzlement and larceny grow-1 ing out of the collapse of the vast public utilities empire he once ruled,( was arrested and ordered held fore return to Illinois to face the in- dictments from which he had fled. He was held in the house of de- tention tonight and the Government announced that he would be handed over to American authorities as soon as they appear with the papers nec- essary for the formal transfer from Turkish hands to those of officers rep-t resenting Insull's adopted land. With tears in his eyes and anI acutely dejected look on his face, In- sull was taken prisoner in the Hotel London in a suburb of the Istanbul, where he had gone in the morning with a squad of detectvies who, even at that time, had him practically in custody. Placed in the detention institution, Insull ended his strange and exciting odyssey of several weeks aboard the little tramp steamer Maiotis which1 he had chartered in Greece as a tem- porary haven until he could find what he thought might be a refuge from arrest and extradition.$ How long he must remain in cus- tody here could not be determined to- night. There were no American ar- resting officers near Turkey and someI circles believed that it might be nec- essary to have officers sent here from Electoral Board Picks Maynard Head Of League Also Chooses Sutherland As Recording Secretary For Coming Year Maxine Maynard, '35, was named new League president yesterday by members of the League Electoral Board. Barbara Sutherland, '35, was appointed to the next position of prominence in the League, that of recording secretary. The Board, which accepted the ap- plications and made the final choice, is composed of two faculty members and three students: Dean Alice Lloyd, Dr. Margaret Bell, Grace Mayer, '34Ed., Ruth Robinson, '34, and Har- riett Jennings, '34. Miss Maynard has been active on campus since her freshman year. This year she was chosen president of, Wyvern, juniorhhonorary society. Particularly active in the field of music, she had the positions of music chairman. of the Junior Girls' Play and presidency of Glee Club this year. Previously she was business manager and vice-president of the Freshman Girls' Glee Club. She is also a mem- ber of the Undergraduate Council, and has been active on numerous other campus committees, including Sophomore Cabaret and League All- Campus Cabaret. Chairman Of J.G.P. Miss Sutherland has also served in a good many capacities since she has been on campus. Her chief position was that of general chairman of this year's Junior Girls' Play. She has also acted as vice-chairman of the Soph- omore Cabaret and was active in committee work for the Freshman Pageant. Vice-presidents of the League will be chosen at an all-campus election after spring vacation, according to Miss Mayer, '34Ed., present president of the League. The exact date is not yet known. The vice-presidents will represent the various schools and will be members of the Board of Direc- tors. Ceremonies In May Installation ceremonies for the new officers will be held during May. At that time. a banquet, which will be open to all women, will be given in their honor. Betty Aigler, '35, presi- dent of Panhellenic, is in charge of the banquet. Committee positions will be named by the new president in the near fu- ture. Applications for committee chairmen may still be handed in either to Miss Ethel McCormick's of- fice or to Miss Mayer. There is rooms for any number of women for League work under the new system, accord- ing to Miss McCormick, since a lot of reorganization work in selecting the committees and planning the new work in publicity, social, reception, house, and undergraduate fund has to be done. Plan Meeting Group May 4 Conference To Hold Three Sessions Here On May 4 And 5 Toledo University President To Talk Eby, Cole, Tucker Smith To Appear On Program In Friday Session Plans for the State Intercollegiate Anti-War Conference, which is being held here Friday and Saturday, May 4 and 5,.neared completion yesterday as the committee in charge an- nounced that three sessions will be held; one at 8 p.m. Friday, the sec- ond at 9 a.m. Saturday and the final session at 3 p.m. Saturday. Prof. Philip Nash, president of To- ledo University, will be the principal speaker at the Friday night meeting, which will be a joint session of the state college and high school anti- war groups. The high school groups are under the direction of William Rohn, senior in the Ann Arbor High School. Other speakers on the Friday night program are Kermet Eby, in- structor in history and international relations at the Ann Arbor High School, Prof. L. E. Cole, of the psy- chology department at Oberlin Col- lege, Tucker Smith, director of Brookwood Labor College, Katonah, N.Y. Smith for many years served as chairman of the Committee on Militarism and Education in New York City. There will also be several student speakers. At the meeting Saturday morning the high school and college groups will divide up into commissions to frame plans of action on various phases of the war issue. Early Saturday afternoon the com- mittee announced that there will probably be a public demonstration. The final session at 3 p.m. will be another joint sessi and the reports of the various*c6 rinissions-will be reported, discussed, and in some cases adopted. The committee is negotiat- ing at the present time for a speaker of sufficient reputation to close the session. The theme of the conference as de- cided yesterday is "The Student Acts to Abolish War." The purpose was described as "to develop an efficient anti-war program of action for stu- dents." Handman Approves New Deal Control Prof. Max S. Handman of the de- partment of economics spoke to the members of the Student Press Club on "The Problems of the New Deal" at the regular meeting of the club last night. Professor Handman expressed a belief that the country must ulti- mately accept governmental control of business and industry. It is im- perative, he said, that the government take a part in the lives of the people. Striking at the fundamentals of the capitalistic system, he intimated that immediate recovery would be ob- tained only at the expense of con- tinuing the present capitalistic con-' trol which means continued diffi- culties. CALLS RUSSIA DEMOCRACY CINCINNATI, April 2--()--Alex- ander A. Troyanovsky, Soviet am- bassador to the United States, today described the Russian government as a "full democracy," and asserted that Russians do not consider Joseph Sta- lin as a dictator. Regulations Of Student Affairs To Be Codified Action Of Undergraduate Council Last Spring Is Behind Move University regulations in regards to student conduct are being codified by a committee of the University Senate and a definite announcement on the subject will be made within a few weeks, Prof. Calvin . Davis, of the School of Education, committee chairman, declared yesterday. The committee was appointed in 1932 to take up the matter, and has had six successive chairmen during the last two years. Action on the codification was spurred by the Undergraduate Coun- cil on Student Affairs last spring shortly after its creation, when it asked that a definite set of regula- tions be drawn up to govern student conduct, on which the faculty disci- plinary committee would base its ac- tions. At that time, as at present, disci- plinary cases are treated each on their own merits, the general prin ciples being unannounced. To Present All I Nations Revue At 8:15_Today Foreign Students To Give A Pageantry Program In1 Hill Auditorium A program of pageantry will be presented by the foreign students of the University at 8:15 p.m. today at Hill Auditorium in the "1934 All Na- tions Revue," the proceeds of which will be used for the Foreign Students' Scholarship Fund and the Kiwanis Club's Underprivileged Children'st Fund. The completed program as an-1 nounced by Prof. J. Raleigh Nelson,t Counsellor to Foreign Students, is as follows: An overture by a trio from the School of Music, "The Young Prince and Princess from Shehera-t zade," by Rimsky-Korsakov; the Uni- versity Girls' Glee Club will sing1 three numbers, followed by threet dances from the Hoyer Studio. Two Japanese numbers, "The Tea1 Ceremonial," and "An Ancient Fan Dance," will be presented by the Jap- anese Club; Play Production will pre-t sent a marionette play by Paul Auble entitled, "Death Among the Daisies";, the Russian Cathedral Choir of De- troit will sing three numbers. Part of the program will begin with an overture by the trio, "Hymn toj the Sun," by Rimsky-Korsakov. Thet next feature will be entitled "Korean Types; a Series of Tableaux from 'the Land of the Morning Calm.'" These will be staged by the Korean stu- dents. A pantomime dance "The CWA Workers," will be presented by Play Production and the physical educa- tion department as the next feature. "The Carinosa," a national Philip- pine dance, will be presented by the Philippine-Michigan club; the Chi- nese club will conclude their part of the program by enacting "Chinese1 Birthday Ceremonies; Grandmother's Sixtieth Birth in an Old Fashioned Chinese Home." The revue will con- clude with the rendition of two choral numbers by the Russian Cath- edral Choir."' Tickets are on sale at Wahrs and are priced at 50 and 75 cents. Relis Will Speak At 8 P.M. Tonight Personal experiences with the rev- olutionary student movement of Cuba1 will be related at 8 p.m. today in Nat-+ ural Science Auditorium by Walter Relis, New York student. Relis will speak on "Students in the Cuban1 Revolution." Walter Relis, who is a senior at City College of New York, was chosen by the National Student League be- Proposal Made To' Income Tax And High Salaries Swingout Is Abolished By Senate Committee; Council Asked To Plan Raise Lower WASHINGTON, April 2. i-(R) - A barrage of amendments, including proposals to increase the income tax rate by 50 per cent and to bring down high salaries was leveled at the $330,- 000,000 Revenue Bill as it was taken up for the first time today by the Senate. Pat Harrison (Dem., Miss.), chair- man of the Finance Committee which revised the $258,000,000 House-ap- proved bill by adding $72,000,000 in new taxes and taxation savings, opened debate with a plea for prompt passage. "The bill distributes the tax burden fairly among taxpayers and will in no way impede legitimate business transactions," he said, adding that its two main purposes were to raise much-needed revenue and to make it more difficult for the wealthy to avoid their just share of taxation Senator Robert M. LaFollette, Jr., (Rep., Wis.), whose proposal to in- crease the normal income taxes from 4 to 6 per cent and surtaxes all along the line with a maximum of 71 per cent on incomes over $1,000,- 000 as against 59 per cent in the bill, was lost in committee, gave notice that he would make an effort to have it adopted on the floor. Senator Thomas P. Gore (Dem., 'Okla.) offered amendments which would disallow deductions from gross income of salaries and bonuses paid by corporations in excess of $75,000 to individuals and tax all income from such source over that figure 80 per cent. Elimination of the provision in existing law permitting one corpora- tion to deduct from gross income div- idends received from another cor- poration was proposed by Senator Borah, (Rep., Idaho). He also wants to take away the credit for taxes paid by foreign sub- sidiaries of domestic corporations and to repeal the clause allowing corpora- tions to file consolidated returns. Political Neophyte Seeks Experience; Arrested And Fined Dean Emerson, '34, president of the University of Michigan Young Dem- ocrats Club and ardent supporter of the repeal amendment, was arrested and forced to pay a $10 fine before Judge Jay H. Payne yesterday for violating the city election laws. Emerson was distributing handbills within 100 feet of an election booth, a punishable offense in Michigan. William M. Hollands, dry alderman of the first ward, had him arrested, and although the police were inclined to believe that Emerson should be set free with a warning, Hollands, insisted upon the arrest and punish-. ment. Also actively interested in politics, Emerson was elected president of the democratic group on campus this year. He has taken 27 hours of polit- ical science and engaged in the beer battle, he said, to gain some "prac- tical political experience." TOKEN OF DILLINGER LANSING, April 2-- (P)-The Au- April Gargoyle Appears For Campus Sale Today The April number of the Gar- goyle will appear for sale at all prominent points on campus to- day. This month's issue will' be featured by parodies on "What's Doing" and Arthur Brisbane's daily column in the newspapers. In addition there will be inter- esting sidelights on the coming Dramatic Festival and the Union Opera, "With Banners Flying." All of the popular departments of the past issues will again be featured. Seek To Amend House Revenue Bill In Senate, Substitut .1'