'I PAGE EIGHT THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY,DECEMBER C,?W3 PAGE EIGHT FRIDAY, DECEMBER 44 ?95 SPORTS ENTHUSIAST: Civil Law Expert To Retire In June By FREDDI LOEWENBERG Forty-three years ago a young lawyer quit his Chicago practice to join the University law school faculty. Prof. Ralph W. Aigler, who will terminate his teaching career in June, has since become known as one of the outstanding civil law professors at the University and the "Dean" of the Western Con- ference, a title earned as Michi- gan's faculty representative. * *.* ENTERING THE business world immediately after graduation from -high school, Prof. Aigler looked to- ward banking as his life's work. But boyhood ambitions and a talk with his brother, then a law stu- dent at the University, led him to Michigan first to get his law de- gree and later to begin a long ca- reer as professor of civil law. Accepting a job in Chicago af- ter graduation, he remained in general practice only three years.aLaw as a practice didn't suit him. Serving the needs of a client made him take one side or the other, while he had the interest in the law as it was or should be. "The law teacher looks at the law not as an advocate but as a student," he explained, "and can go one step further and ask him- self what the law ought to be." So in 1910, on the advice and re- commendation of the then Law School Dean Henry M. Bates, he joined the faculty and has been affiliated with the University ev- er since. INVOLVEMENT WITH the Big Ten came about by accident. Re- lating the story, Prof. Aigler re- called that when Michigan with- drew from the Conference in 1908, there was much debate on the question of re-entry. Finally when a public debate was held by the Union, Prof. Aigler was chosen to argue for joining because of his previous endorsement. The debate attracted a great deal of, attention and when a positio~n became vacant on the athletic board, Prof. Aigler was SL Approves Committee Appointments Students named by Student Leg- islature's cabinet to head up SL committees for the present term were approved Wednesday by the Legislature. Hank Berliner,''56, was named chairman of the Campus Action Committee. Larry Harris, '56, and Tom Bleha, '56, will head the Cul- ture and Education and Human Relations Committees respectively. * * * INTERCOLLEGIATE Relations Committee will be chaired by Dick McKenzie, the International Re- lations Comnittee by Cris Reifel, '55, and the Public Relations Com- mittee by Marc Jacobson, '55. SL Treasurer Vic Hampton, '54, will head the Finance Com- mittee and Book Exchange Board. Chairman of the Cin- ema Guild board will be Dave Gross, '56. Coordinator of the Executive Wing will be Donna Netzer, '56, while Hank Crapo, '54, will be SL Comptroller and Nan Howe, '56, Secretariat Head. Fred Hicks, '54, SL vice-presi- dent will chair the special tempor- ary committee which plans a study of SL's constitution and structure. Other members of the committee include Bert Braun, '54, Leah Marks, '55L, Bob Neary, '54BAd., Steve Jelin, '55, Bob Ely, '54E, Ruth Rossner, '55, Janet Netzer, '54 and Ned Simon, '55. Neary and Jelin will also sit on the University Lecture Committee which approves speakers who have been requested to speak on campus. Shopping Days Until Christmas CHRISTMAS GIFT CHECK LIST Rings ... Bracelets Jeweled Pins ... Earrings Cuff Links ... Tie Bars Jewel Boxes ... Compacts Lighters ... Cases Necklaces ... Bar Pins Handbaas ... Billfolds Ban Removal Plans Given To Regents (Continued from Page 1) Another reported reason for de- lay in Regents' action has been to enable further study of the parking problem in the campus area. * * * A THOROUGH study of cam- pus-area parking was made by the business operations committee of the University Senate last March. The committee report showed there are 968 restricted park- ing spaces on campus in addi- tion to 425 open spaces for a to- tal of 1,393 available off street parking slots. In the University Hospital area there were found to be a total of 1,268 spaces, 408 of them restrict- ed and 860 open. SOME 2,500 permits for restrict- ed parking spaces are issued to faculty and full-time employes of the University each year, that is 2.5 cars for every space. Because of considerable turnover in park- ing during the course of a day the problem here is not acute. The report estimated that be- tween 3,200 and 3,500 cars be- longing to campus people (not students) are parked in the campus area daily. Conclusions of the survey indi- cated no immediate solution to the parking problem. A petition this fall to the Ann Arbor City Council to close all or portions of five streets in the campus area signed by 11 Uni- versity and city administrators was temporarily withdrawn from the council's agenda at their Oct. 5 meeting. At that time University Vice- President Wilbus K. Pierpont said the University has an interest in closing the streets. He said the University is interested in co-op- erating with the city in controlling traffic in the campus area and in some cases in providing additional parking areas. The streets involved were all lo-' -cated on the north, east and south-{ ern fringes of the campus area. Youthful 'U' Hospital Patients Play, Rest in Galens Workshop Daily-Betsy Smith PROF. RALPH W. AIGLER . . . 43 years with the University selected to fill it, two years lat- er becoming chairman of the board. When Michigan return- ed to the Big Ten, he was ap- pointed faculty representative. Athletics, his main avocation, provides him "wit something to do other than deal with the law." Prof. Aigler has known personally virtually all Michigan athletes, wfth his enthusiasm for. football stemming from an interest in the activities of young people. An ar- dent fan, he follows .the football! team to most of its games. HIS SPORTS interests are not limited to football, however. A friend of Branch Rickey's, he has passes to all National League baseball parks. His students know him for his compelling classroom manner. He has the habit of stating facts without giving the answer in such a manner that the student will be motivated to go look it up in the library. * * * TUNING TO his philosophy, Prof. Aigler stated that one should do the best he can. "I do believe that one should hold to his pre- sent course until he is reasonably sure that things will be better if one were to travel another road," he continued. Prof. Aigler takes pride in the fact that he was largely res- ponsible for the creation of Mi- chigan's Forty Year Marketable Title Act, which has since been adopted by three other states. An author, he has written case books, law review articles and is an authority on the legal doc- trines which govern those who find things. Other interests include travel- ing and reading in the field of law. He especially likes to go to California. Often accepting vaca- tion teaching jobs, he recently spent a summer at Harvard. Termed by one of his friends "the youngest man of his age I know," Prof. Aigler doesn't be- lieve in glorifying the good old days. "When you start talking about the good old days, it is a sign that you are getting old," he concluded. ROTC Cadets Set To See Tank Plant Several Army ROTC cadets will leave today for a tour of the Ford Livonia Tank Plant arranged by the military science department. The tour, designed to acquaint cadets with varied activities of the Army, will include a detailed study of the tank assembly line which is in the process of greatly modifying the T-48 tanks. Cadets will also view the Army Engineers construc- tion of a warehouse for "moth- balling" the machines used in the actual production of the T-48 tank. Annual Drive For Funds This Week goal of $6,500 Set by Society Rm. 9005, University Hospital, isn't the tidy sort of room you generally expect to find in a hos- pital, but the happy voices of busy children blend pleasantly with the whine of a jigsaw and sander. Here in the Galens workshop young patients .spend many of the long hours and days of recupera- tion and waiting in interesting, useful and active pursuits. A FULL-TIME therapist, Har- vey Katchan of the University Hospital school, supervises and guides the activities of the young- sters in the shop. "'The first thing to be remem- bered is that sick children don't like being sick. Unlike some adults, sickness very quickly bores the child," Katchan warn- ed. The Galens shop uses every pos- sible means to prevent this bore- dom. Equipment includes looms, Jigsaws, a sapd table, a drill press, a sander, pottery kilns, and num- erous stores of "raw materials" for use with the machinery or other arts and crafts work. * * * GALENS Medical Society is sole supporter for the shop, and de- rives funds from its annual tag days at Christmas time. Mem- bers of the honorary medical so- ciety will man buckets during this year's drive today and tomorrow to try and meet their goal of $6,500. The society also sponsors an annual Christmas party for children in the hospital and do- nates money for the purchase of children's books and games used in the hospital. A garden is carefully planted' and cultivated on a sunporch ad- joining the workshop during the summer time and a small collec- tion of animals entertains the pa- tienst. "Sparky," a pet racoon donated by a former patient, is the most favored animal in the shop, along with a rabbit. A hive of bees in glass containers is safely observed during warm periods by the youngsters. t "SPORTY" ASSISTS A YOUNG PATIENT WITH A PROJECT F 1 i T t T r "I STUDENT INTERNATIONAL TRAVEL ASSOCIATION Summer Tours Area Representative, Carol Collins on Canipus FRIDAY, DEC. 4 11:30 to 4:30 Women's League Lobby DAILY PHOTO FEATURE Story by Wally Eberhard Pictures Courtesy Galens Society and University Hospital II F. '1 YOUNGSTER USES GALEN LOOM fa 195 3 visua I arts music cretiv wrtig i A CLAY FIGURE TAKES SHAPE IN GALENS SHOP PATIENT USES MATERIALS FURNISHED BY GALENS t t r IIrife - ~ ~1-N V '4.. . -