,.. THE MICHIGAN DAILY THUJRSDAY, NOVEMBER 14, Speaks About South America Speaks In Fifth Of Weekly Geography-Travel Series Over Station WJR Choosing the Amazon River of South America as his subject, Prof. Carl D. LaRue of the botany depart- ment gave the fifth in the weekly Geography-Travel series of talks yes- terday over WJR. "If the Mississippi be the Father of Waters, then the mighty Amazon is at least the great-great-grand- father of all rivers, being over 3,800 miles in length. It drains over 2,- 700,000 square miles of very rainy country, and the volume of its waters is beyond ordinary comprehension. "A rough idea of the Amazon in comparison with the Mississippi may be given by the fact that while the latter must be dredged constantly to maintain a depth of nine feet be- tween the mouth of the Ohio /and ,New Orleans, the Amazon has an average depth of 100 feet for a dis- tance equal to the entire length of our Father of Waters. In its lower course the Amazon exceeds 200 feet in depth and in places it is more than 700 feet deep," Professor LaRue ex- plained. Sail From New York In from 13 to 15 days one can sail from New York to Para, the focus f all'traffic to and from the Amazon region. The river steamers which travel up and down stream have one deck only, entirely roofed over. The cabins are too hot for sleeping, and one slings his hammock on deck in the open air; if fortunate, he gets space alongside the officers' cabins where there is a little breeze. Professor LaRue went on to say that the population of the Amazon 'alley is of mixed stock derived from the native Indians, the Portuguese -ettlers, and the negroes originally rought from Africa as slaves. There 1re still remnants of these stocks un- inixed, but the mass of the people is mnade up of intermingled elements of all three races. Many Dangers "One is alwaysquestioned about the dangers of Amazon exploration. They are many, it is true: the danger of being wrecked in the violent storms which sweep the rivers; dangers of tunning short of food, being injured Iy falling trees or great branches loaded with climbing vines; danger of becoming ill, a month away from the care of a physician. Then there is the danger of being lost in the jungle. "The perils of poisonous snakes loom large in the eyes of most people, but I have seen very few snakes in the jungle though many have been near. Most of these I have seen were harmless. Aside from alligators, :which are numerous though not al- ways savage, and the peccary, dan- gerous only in herds, none of the large animals will attack men," the speaker declared. Dean Bates Delivers Talk On Constitution Before Bar Group To Direct Own Opera Symphony Will Give First In Deniii. s ii at I awyers j Cleanse Profession Of Unworthy Members Because Thomas F. McDonald, '06L, is president of the St. Louis Bar Association, Dean Henry M. Bates of the Law School, who once taught him, made some interesting com- ments on the ccnstitution last week. The way it all came about was be- cause of the fact that Nov. 2, the bar association won the St. Louis award for distinguished public service. It was the first time that a bar as- sociation anywhere had been award- ed such a prize, and it was the first time the award was given to a group, rather than an individual. The award was presented Nov. 5, and Mr. McDonald sought the service of his old teacher, Dean Bates, to make the address of the evening. Dean Bates did, made the front pages of St. Louis newspapers, and his speech received favorable -comment in several editorials. Completion Of New Library Is Announced Contains Texts Of German Classics Donated By The Members Of Staff In a meeting of the staff of the German department, yesterday, the completion of the new German li- brary was officially announced, by Prof. Henry W. Nordmeyer, chair- man of the German department. Professor Nordmeyer stated the aim in the establishment of the new library was to create an opportunity for second year German students to gain a greater insight into the cul- ture expressed in the German tongue, through extensive outside reading. Each student in German 31 and 32 will be required to do a certain amount of outside reading each term, he explained, and a conference with the instructor will follow each selec- tion read. In this way, Professor Nordmeyer pointed out, the German department hopes to promote more individual contacts between instruc- tor and student and to determine in- dividual causes of difficulty. This library, a month in the mak- ing, contains approximately 600 books largely including standardized texts of the great German classics. The library was constructed by N.Y.A. workers and all the books contained in it were donated from the private libraries of members of the depart- mental staff. For the information of students in courses 31 and 32, Pro- fessor Nordmeyer has announced that the library will be opened 2 to 4:30 p.m. week days and 9 to 11 a.m. Saturday. Terming this period the most criti- cal in American history, Dean Bates told the lawyers that the legal pro- fession "must purge itself of un- worthy members and raise its stand- ards. Then it must take a page from the lawyers of Revolutionary days and make an analysis and study of government." He advised the bar association to "look at the situation realistically, functionally, and not be drawn as- tray by phrases. "While I do not believe the Con- stitution is sacrosanct and above amending, it is entitled to respect," Dean Bates said in discussing pro- posed constitutional reform to re- move stumbling blocks in the way of the New Deal." A great deal has been said on both sides," he con- tinued, "but it lacks analytical ef- fort and tends to arouse the emo- tions of the emotional. . . . The ar- guments are characterized by more head than light. "I am not disposed to criticize President Roosevelt for suggesting amendment to the constitution," Dean Bates explained. "Lincoln did it after the Dred Scott decision, and it is a perfectly proper thing for the President to do. But I should ques- tion whether an attempt to give more power to the Federal Government would not do injury to our Govern- ment. We should go on adapting and adjusting the Constitution to the conditions. It is slower but it is the price of orderly government and stable insitutions. "I think the Supreme Court has sometimes made mistakes in meticu- lous and legalistic interpretations of what was merely a political standard and not a legal matter," Dean Bates said of the 'due process' clause of the Constitution. "Our efforts to make it so have not been successful, but I do not believe the time has come to eliminate 'due process.' Prof. Sunderland Leaves For Capital (onert Series Local Police Get Their Man After Merry Chase After a merry chase through down- town streets, local police finally served a warrant on Richard Kuehn, 404 S. Ashley St., yesterday after- noon. Kuehn, alias Dick Keen, took a truck and $20 from Adolph Schli- echer, 432 Fifth St., to buy eggs in Wayne. When apprehended, Kuehn had neither truck, eggs, or money. Police Investigate $30 Theft In Student's Room Richard Silarsky, '39E, reported to police Tuesday ight that some- one had entered his room at 509 Thompson Street and took $31 from a wallet he had put in a box. The money was taken between 3-6 p.m Officers took the oox and box-cover to headquarters where they tested them to find fingerprints. Because of the nature of theematerial, no traces of prints could be found. Ann Arbor Premiere 'Danse Noronique' To Featured Sunday Of Be The University Little Symphony' will present the first in a series of concerts at 8:15 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 17, in the Ethel Fountain Hussey Room of the League. The orchestra will be under the direction of Thor Johnson and the concert will be open to the public. Ruby Peinert, Grad., will be violon- cello soloist and will play David Pop- per's "Hungarian Rhapsody" with orchestral accompaniment. Miss Peinert has been soloist with the Uni- versity Symphony conducted by Dr. Earl B. Moore, and was soloist with the Little Symphony last season. The first Ann Arbor presentation of Herbert Hazelman's "Danse Nor- onique" will be featured on the pro- gram. The selection was composed for chamber orchestra in 1932 while the composer was a student at the University of North Carolina. It was given its first performance with the North Carolina Symphony and was later performed by the National Symphony in Washington, D. C. Hazelman's work has aroused con- siderable comment in musical cen- ters where his works have been per- formed. The program for Sunday's concert will be as follows : I. :ti /Jr !/ y I' Y =' .y law u -Associated Press Photo. Ethel Leginska's greatest ambi- tion - to be the first woman to write and conduct an opera - is about to be fulfilled. The Eng- lish-born composer and former conductor of the Montreal opera company, will direct presentation of "Gale," the opera she com- posed, in Chicago, November 23. Adams Serves on New Copy Testing Board Prof. Henry F. Adams of the psy- chology department has accepted the invitation of the Psychological Cor- poration of New York City to serve on a jury of advertising psycholo- gists who will make an authoritative study of Copy Testing, it was an- nounced last night. The jury, chosen from among the Symphony No. II in Adagio : Allegro Andante Menuetto Allegro spiritoso D major .Haydn 20 leading psychologists in this par- LProf.don . SunderWashndtof, the ticular field, will present a joint re- Law School left for Washington, D.C., port explaining the value of various yesterday where he will submit a pre- methods of copy testing and also the liminary draft for Federal court rules validity of these methods or their procedure, designed by Dean Clark of significance as means of predicting the Yale law school and himself, to the effectiveness of advertisements. Prof. A. T. Poffenberger of Co- the Supreme Court advisory commit- I lumbia University has been designat- tee on Federal court rules of which he ed to represent the corporation's ex- is a member. ecutive committee in the conduct of The Supreme Court appointed Pro- 'the study. Among the other members fessor Sunderland as a member of the of the jury are President Walter Dill committee when it was formed by an Scott of Northwestern University, act of Congress last May. Prof. Edward L. Thorndike of Teach- The proposal made in Congress for I ers College, Columbia, and Henry C. the establishment of the committee Link, secretary-treasurer of the Psy- to prepare a complete code of rules to chological Corporation. regulate Federal court procedure came as a result of the confusion caused by the present system, which is operated in accordance ith Su- preme Court rules, local and state rules, district rules, and rules laid down by Federal statutes. II. Four Russian Folk Songs ... Liadov Chant Religieux Ronde Berceuse "I Danced with a Mosquito" III. Hungarian Rhapsody for Violon- cello and Orchestra........Popper Miss Peinert IV. (a) The Hurdy-Gurdy Man, from "Kaleidoscope" ........Gossens '(b) Danse Moronique ... .Hazelman First Performance in Ann Arbor. V. Overture to the Opera, "Mignon" .........................Thom as KALDER SENTENCED GRAND RAPIDS, Nov. 13. - tP) - Charles W. 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