s THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRri;Ay> JANUARY 10, lf): ; STX FTLI'DAY, JANUARY 10, 19~O Board Outlines New Policy For [aeulty Tenuire Deans And Chairmen May Retire After Service Of 15 Years A new policy in regard to the ten- ure of teachers in administrative positions was definitely outlined by the Board of Regents during the course of the University year ending in June, 1935, according to the an- nual report of President Ruthven. According to the new plan deans, directors and heads or chairmen of departments of teaching and research may retire upon the completion of 15 years of service in their adminis- trative positions and may, at the end of this period, be appointed to pro- fessorships in their particular fields. In commenting on the action of the Regents, President Ruthven pointed out that "it is now recognized in practice that the period .of service for college and university teachers and administrators should end be- tween the ages of 65 and 70." How- ever, he continued, a plan of arbi- trarily-fixed retiring age does not always operate for the "best interests of education or for the promoting of the welfare of the individual member of the faculty." 'Administrative Duties Heavy' "The usual, and proper, form of government for our colleges," Dr. Ruthven reported, "places education- al policies and their administration in the hands of faculty members. It should, however, be appreciated that in large universities, at least, the ad- ministrative burdens of the - deans, directors and department heads are heavy and are bound to interfere with both teaching and productive scholarship."j Perhaps the best reason for the adoption of the new policy, according to the report, is to permit a member of the teaching faculty to follow "teaching and scholarly pursuits," after the completion of his adminis- trative duties.c Would Use More Young Men1 In concluding this section of his annual relort, President Ruthven stated that the . new policy "shouldi serve to increase the number of youngi men in administrative positions and1 to permit the older men who have1 been handicapped by such burdens-, to develop in their special fields. "More generally, the plan shouldi spread the load. of administrativet work, assist the institution in giving; greater consideration to the indivi-a dual than can be accorded under thei single method of the fixed retiring age." News Truck Forced Into Ambulance Service -AssocIaLe Press Photo. This Associated Press-Paramount News truck was pressed into service as an emergency ambulance following the deadly bombing of Dessye by Italian raiders. Casualties brought to the truck by Ethiopian soldiers were rushed to the nearest Red Cross station. Growing Of Identical Twins In Plants Effected LaRue Special Session [s Planned For CoIleoe Students Convention To Be Held In Detroit By Society Of Automotive Engineer; A special session for college stu- dents will be held Monday in con- junction with the annual conference of the Society of Automotive Engi- neers next week in Detroit, and a large number of students from the University are expected to attend, ac- cording to Prof. Walter E. Lay, head of the department of automotive en- gineering. The student session is one of the opening meetings of the conference, and is scheduled to begin at 2 p.m. in the grand ballroom of the Book- Cadillac Hotel. Students in the au- tomotive engineering department will be excused from classes Monday af- ternoon if they wish to attend the session, Professor Lay announced. Two Addresses Plan The program includes two addres-I ses, one by O. T. Kreusser, executive director of the Museum of Science and Industry in Chicago, on the sub- ject "An Objective View of Automo- tive Industry" and the other by F. R. Speed, engineer of the Ethyl Gaso- line Corporation, concerning "The Story of Ethyl Gas." Approximately 1500 students from Michigan colleges were present at the meeting held last year, the ma- jority of them coming from col- leges in Detroit, from Michigan State, Flint Institute of Technology and the University of Michigan. Sessions Open To Students The S. A. E. conference will ex- tend through Thursday of next week, and the regular sessions will be open to students, although they have not been specifically invited, Professor Lay stated. All the members of the automotive engineering faculty will be present at the conference, and Prof. A. E. White, director of the department of engi- neering research, will deliver a paper at a session Monday afternoon on "Trends in Automotive Alloy." The Harvard Committee on Re- search in the Social Sciences has re- ceived a $300,000 Rockefeller Founda- tion grant. STROH'S PABST BLUE RIBBON FRIAR'S ALE At All Dealers J. J. O'KANE, Dist. Dial 3500 Seeks New AAA Hillel Players Will Offer Three Plays 1Lfillel Players will present informal- ly three one-act plays at 8 p.m. Sun- day in Room 316 of the Union, to en- Sablethe majority of players partici- pating to obtain membership in thej group. These plays will be the first pres- entation of the year given by the Hil- lel Players before the public, and will be open to the public without ad- mission charge, it was announced by Norman Sharfman, '37, president. All three plays will be directed by student members of the organization who have had previous experience in the Players' offerings. Lawrence Langner's comedy on love, "Another Way Out," will be directed by Ada, Zolla, '37. "The Finger of God" by Percival Wilde will be directed by Marguerite Merkel, '37. Both Louise Sainek, '38, and Ruth Pipkint, '38, will direct Tompkins' satire on social veneer, affectation and manners, Sham." The growing of idrentical twin plants, a feat which has baffled science for more than 30 years has been accomplished by Prof. Carl D. LaRue of the botany department. Professor LaRue announced his dis- covery at the American Association for the Advancement of Science which was held in St. Louis earlier in January. Identical twins, which are com- mon in the animal kingdom as well as among humans, are halves of the same egg, or ovum, which produces children so similar that they some- times can not be told apart. In plants, according to the dis- covery which Professor LaRue made in his laboratory here, the raising of identical twin plants is accomplished by cutting embryonic seeds into two bits, so small that they are barely visible without a microscope. *Botanists throughout the world have to date tried without success to raise the twin plants, and have sought to match the "tissue culture" by which living flesh is grown in test tubes. Professor LaRue solved the plant problem by using an idea from the living "tissue culture" technique. There embryonic organisms or tis- sues have always showed extra pow- ers of growth and life. Embryonic seeds, that is, unripe seeds whose structures have just barely begun to form, were used by Professor LaRue. Wild lettuce, ox- eye, dandelion, daisy, and tomato seeds were cut in two. These seeds were placed in a spe- cial mixture of agar, salts, sugar and the recently discovered hormone which causes plants to grow. Then the seeds were planted. The halved seeds grew at first into tiny plants, perfectly formed. When transplant- ed into the soil these grew normally as other plants. Caesarian operations on some grass seeds were then performed by Pro- fessor LaRue. From the unripened seeds he extracted the embryos at a period comparable to the removal of a human embryo from its mother at two months. These grass seeds furnished a sur- prise by growing into normal grass as promptly as fully ripened grass seed. Murphy Is Moved To State Hospital Following the securing of a pro- bate court order. Paul Murphy, 24- year-old psychopathic patient at Mercywood Sanitarium" who attacked and killed his attendant, Carroll Van Gundy, former graduate student here, was transferred to the Ypsilanti State hospital late yesterday afternoon. Clad in a strait jacket, placed on him following the attack, Murphy was seemingly unaware of what was taking place. The only reference to the attack, Prosecutor Albert J. Rapp said, was in his query, "What be- come of the young man I hit with the glass." The petition for committment based upon the investigation made by the prosecutor was presented by the county sheriff. The transfer to the state institution had the approval of the patient's family. Prosecutor Rapp added that the committment was the best disposition of the case at the present time. -Associated Press Photo Chester C. Davis (above), AAA administrator, with Secretary Wal- lace and other new deal leaders is considering five suggested alterna- tives to the AAA, ruled unconstitu- tional by the Supreme Court. PRESBYTERIANS GIVE PARTY The Westminster Guild of the Presbyterian Church will hold its first party of the year at 8:30 p.m. tonight. Malcolm Daniels, '39, who is in charge of the affair, announced yesterday an informal evening of dancing and stunts. Light refresh- ments will be served. There will be a charge of 15 cents per person. friday night dance * the hut cellar 9:30 to 12:30 the fingerle the hut operated hut READ THE WANT ADS' Exams Are Near! Tutors! Advertise In The Michigan Daily CLASSIFIED AD SECTION RATES are as low as l0c Per Line. AL IFV MICHIGAN UNION RAINBOW ROOM NEW TABLE SERVICE Reservations at Union Desk THE BEST MUSIC IN ANN ARBOR Bob Steinle and His Melody Men FLOOR SHOW NIGHTLY nn tn /n1-1 Y 'n / n C A n /'~y N'1 ' ' [