PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, MAY 16, ]936 PAGE SIX SATURDAY, MAY 16, W36 Larger Budoet Is Necessary For Next Year Regents Okay $155,000 Budget Increase Due To Larger Enrollment (Cotinue rrun Page1) Instructor to Assistant Professor of Mathematics; William Campbell Steere, "from Instructor to Assistant Professor of Botany. College Of Engineering William Stuart Housel, from As- sistant Professor to Associate Pro- fessor of Civil Engineering; Harold Rhys Lloyd, from Assistant Profes- sor to Associate Professor of Me- chanical Engineering; Franklin Le- land Everett, from Instructor to Assistant Professor of Engineering Mechanics; Donovan Harold Young, from Instructor to Assistant Profes- sor of Engineering Mechanics. Law School William Wirt Blume, from Asso- ciate Professor to Professor of Law and of Legal Research; John Philip Dawson, from Associate Professor to Professor of Law. Medical School Elizabeth Caroline Crosby, from Associate Professor to Professor of Anatomy; Erwin Ellis Nelson, from Associate Professor to Professor of Pharmacology; Charels Roosevelt Brassfield, from Instructor to Assist- ant Professor of Physiology; Frank Hartsuff Bethell, from Instructor to Assistant Professor of Internal Medi- cine; Stanley Milton Goldhamer, from Instructor to Assistant Profes- sor of Internal Medicine; Franklin Davis Johnston, from Instructor to Assistant Professor of Internal Medi- cine; Don Marshall, from Instructor to Assistant Professor of Ophthal- mology; Luis Yglesias, from Instruc- tor to Assistant Professor of Surgery. School Of Education Mabel Esther Rugen, from Assist- ant Professor to Associate Professor of Physical Education. School Of Business Administration Edgar Howard Gault, from Asso- ciate Professor to Professor of Mar- keting; Dudley Maynard Phelps, from Assistant Professor to Asso- ciate Professor of Marketing; Mer- win Howe Waterman, from Assist- ant Professor to Associate Profes- sor of Finance. School Of Forestry And Conservation William Kynoch, from Associate Professor to Professor of Wood Tech- nology; Howard Marshall Wight, from Assistant Professor to Asso- ciate Professor of Forest Zoology. School Of Music Joseph Brinkman, from Assistant Professor to Associate Professor of Piano. College Of Architecture Wells Ira Bennett, from Associate Professor to Professor of Architec- ture; Walter Van Cleve Marshall. from Assistant Professor to Asso- ciate Professor of Architecture; Jean Paul Slusser, from Assistant Profes- sor to Associate Professor of Draw- ing and Painting. Bureau Of Cooperation With Educational Institutions Harlan Clifford Koch, from As-. sistant Director of the Bureau o Cooperation with Educational Insti- tAtions, with the rank of Associate Professor, to Assistant Director of the Bureau of Cooperation with Ed- ucational Institutions, with the rank of Professor. Medical School Francis Bruce Fralick, Associat Prof essor of Ophthalmology, wa made Acting Chairman of the De- partment of Ophthalmology. University Museums Carl Eugen Guthe, Director of th Museum of Anthropology, Lecturer in Anthropology, and Chairman of th( Division of the Social Sciences, wa made Director of the University Mu- seums. Polaroid Will Prevent Glare Of Headlights (Continued from Page 1) traffic problems in Detroit, point, out that headlight glare and bad lighting are responsible for many accidents, and stated that if the in sertion of polaroid in automobile: were practical, it would preven many accidents and save many lives Pointing out the difficulty of forc- ing every automobile owner to placc polaroid into his headlights and windshields, and the large cost, Prof H. H. Higbie, also of the engineering school, believes that on illuminated highways the plan of using sodium street lights instead of the regular street lights would avoid the oc- currence of headlight glare more conveniently and at a cheaper cost than polaroid. These lamps, he said provide so much light with so little glare that headlights are not needed driving under them being like driv- ing in the daylight. Experiment: Four Die In San Francisco Night Club Fire To Hold Exhibit Of Chinese Art At Harris Hall Showing Of Jade, Textiles,1 Bronzes And Porcelains To start iay 1 An eXhibit cif Chinese Art will be aid at E arris Hall from 2 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. Monday and Tuesday, May 18 and 19. The exhibit will be given -Associated Press Photo. Four persons lost their lives when the flames of torches carried by a. dancer ignited droperies in a San Francisco night club. Picture shows a fireman lifting a woman's coat from the charred check room in front of which the hysterical crowd knocked down and trampled to death Jo, Dickinson, check girl, in a stampede for the single exit. The others killed included two men and a woman. under the auspices of The League of St. Andrews and The Saint An- drews Aux:iliary Guild. The exhibition, a loan from the collection of Mr. and Mrs. B. A. de Vere Bailey of Ann Arbor and New York, will include articles of jade, rare textiles, antique porcelains and archaic bronzes. Mr. Bailey, an orientalist and writ- er of Asiatic art and at present en- gaged in interpreting and making a catalogue raisonne of Tibetan temple painting for the University Museums, will give four talks on various as- oects of Chinese Art; "Textiles," Monday afternoon; "Porcelains," Mwnday evening; "Symbolism in Chinese Art," Tuesday afternoon; "Chinese Jade," Tuesday evening. The afternoon talks are scheduled at 3:30 p.m. and the evening talks at 8:30 p.m. A collection of craft pottery made by Miss Louis Kitchen of Toledo, Ohio, whose work has been exhibited at the Toledo Museum of Art for several years will also benshown. Tea will be served and there will be an admission fee of 25 cents. As- sisting at the tables in native Chinese costumes will be Misses Rose Chu, Helen Tau, Doris Chen Lau, and Ruby Hau Hiang, all students at the University. ARCHITECTURE EXHIBIT GIVEN In conjunction with homecoming this week-end a small exhibition has been put up in the main floor of the Architectural Building by the faculty of that college. The exhibition, for week-end guests + to the building, is very compact and consists of student work in drawing, painting and other architectural fields. Watland Receives Wickersham Prize C. G. Watland, a graduate of the architecture school, has been chosen as this year's recipient of the Wick- ersham Memorial Scholarship to I England, sponsored by the English Speaking Union. Watland will leave for England May 30 on the S. S. Franconia and aftcr the termination of his scholar- ship will proceed to Sweden in whose modern housing work he is interest- ed. The award which he received is given each year by the Union, which is an organization of English-speak- ing nations, having the purpose of establishing fellowship among the youth of these countries. This year an architect was chosen for the trip. Watland was a student at Michi- gan for four years, having done pre-- viotts work at the University of Iowa. r iWO 11(1ie*l By Grand Jury' In Smith Case NEW YORK, May 15. - (A") - Two men were indicted today on charges of extorting money from Alfred E. Smith, Jr., son of the former gover- nor. The indictments were returned speedily by a grand jury that heard testimony from Smith and four other witnesses, including Catherine Marie Pavlick, a blue-eyed blonde from Queens. One of the defendants, Max D. Krone, 33, a private detective, was arrested immediately. The other, A. Henry Ross, Brooklyn lawyer, notified the district attorney's office through an intermediary that he would sur- render. Krone and Ross were charged jointly in one indictment with "the extortion of $1,500 on or about May 29, 1934, on threat to expose and im- pute to Alfred E. Smith, Jr., a dis- grace." A second indictment charged Krone alone with extorting $10,000 in promissory notes onFeb. 21, 1935, by the same means. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 4) Students' Bible Class. H. L. Picker- ill, campus minister, leader. 5:30 p.m., The group will meet at the church, Hill and Tappan Sts., and go from there to an out-door meeting on the bluff. Transporta- tion will be provided. Please be on time. If the weather should be rainy or too cool the usual program will be held at the church; social hour and supper at 5::30 and dis- cussion hour at 6:30 p.m. First Presbyterian Church, Sun- day: Meeting at the Masonic Temple, 327 South Fourth. Ministers: Wil- liam P. Lemon and Norman W. Kunkel. INTRODUCI NG ROAST The Most Outstt In Electric Cool See Our Complete Nesco Line for Wedding Gifts Priced $4.95 to $22.50 THE NEW N ESCO anding Improvement king . . . Complete $I9.095 Note how you can lift the entire hot dinner out of the Roaster with the cool wire lifter. End Pan Covers keep all the good- ness in the vegetables while the roast browns to a delicious crisp, ness. Cuts your cooking costs and keeps your kitchen cool in the hottest weather. New China and Housewares Department - Second Floor 8:00 a.m., Annual Spring Break- fast at the Island. Students may go there direct or meet at the Kunkel home, 1417 So. University. The For- um meeting will be combined with the breakfast, and there will be in- stallation of officers. 10:45 a.m., Sermon by Dr. Lemon, "The Religion of a Realist." 6:00 p.m., Westminster Guild sup- per. 6:30 p.m., Mr. Philip Gaston, new president of the Guild will speak, "looking Ahead." Congregational Church, Sunday: 10:30 a.m., Services of Worship and Religious Education. Mr. Heaps will speak on "Actions Speak Louder than Words." Prof. Preston Slosson will lecture on "Nansen, Champion of Humanity." 4:30 p.m., Student Fellowship. Group will meet at the church to go in cars to their last picnic meeting. Excellence Prize Won By Gustafson Jack R. Gustafson, '38, was award- ed the medal for general excellence, military bearing and knowledge of military science, given by the Sons .)f the American Revolution, yester- day afternoon as a part of the pro- gram held at Palmer Field. Gustafson, although a sophomorej :n the campus, holds a junior rank- ing in the R.O.T.C., and was there-' fore eligible for the medal which is awarded to the outstanding junior in the R.O.T.C. He has a rating of First Sergeant. A retreat parade was also on yes- terday's program. Major George A. Hunt, whose headquarters are at Waukegan, Ill., was among the people in the reviewing line. SMELT RUN ON MUSKEGON, May 15. -P) - Large numbers of smelt are moving up the Muskegon harbor channel. p .,.z. ,... 'I. Ceylonis famous for Spices Bil isfaosfrCfe osbu Turkey i famousfotr Tobacc t J E I