The Weather Y Fair Tuesday and Wednes- day; warmer. UgT Official Publcation Of The Summer Session VOL. XIV No. 8 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, JULY 4, 1933 End Of Dope Habits Seen By Edmunds, Volstead Fired Lecturer Action Under Says League's May Put Drugs Control 46 Countries Will Restrict Narcotics Agreement Made In 1931 Limits Production Of Opium,_Shipment By POWERS MOULTON In the agreement made by 46 coun- tries at the Geneva conference of the League of Nations in 1931-an inter- national pact which becomes effec- tive next Monday, July 10-is seen great promise for the control and eventual elimination of the drug habit, according to Prof. Charles W. Edmunds of the medical school. Speaking on "Drug Addiction-A World Problem" yesterday afternoon on the Summer Session special lec- ture series, Prof. Edmunds outlined the provisions of the agreement whereby the several nations will at last have a grasp on the tremendous illicit trade in drugs which menaces their citizens.. Will Not Flood Market "In the agreement, the nations promised to produce no more drugs than were necessary for their own legitimate medical purposes, to re- port to a central agency the amount needed and the amount used, to ex- port drugs only at the request of an- other government, and not to re-ship drugs once received within their bor- ders," he said. "For Persia, Turkey, and India this means a great reduc- tion in revenue, and the effectiveness of the agreement was not assured until Turkey accepted the stipula- tions on.December 10 of last year." Another important step toward the eradication of the habit was taken in 1926, when India's great annual auc- tion of opium was banned, Professor Edmunds stated. Professor Edmunds discussed dope conditions throughout the world. "China was making progress in the control of the habit," he said, "until unsettled political conditions caused a severe relapse. At present the Jap- anese are encouraging poppy-growing in the provinces they control in order to increase tax revenues. India Has Large Number India, he said, has improved con- ditions considerably, although the problem is still great. Egypt leads the world with 450,000 dope addicts, in spite of all efforts to keep out French and Italian smugglers. Germany has only 5,000 addicts and has passed very strict laws which even limit medical use of drugs. Sweden has only 34 known addicts, the Nether- lands only 30, and England and other northern countries have virtually no narcotics problem. The French government, according to Professor Edmunds, refuses to give out information on the subject, but Paris is known to have 15 dope fac- tories. The United States, although one of the most progressive countries in its efforts at control, has approxi- mately 120,000 addicts, a large per- centage of them being of the criminal class. Heroin is considered the most dangerous of drugs in the country, since it is largely used by criminals and increases their anti-social in- stincts. The wide employment of ver- onal here is believed by some author- ities, he said, to be a worse menace than that of any other drug. 20 Engineers Given Perfect Grade Records Twenty students in the College of Engineering received the grade of "A" in all their subjects during the past semester, it was announced by the secretary of the College yester- day. Only two of them were carry- ing part-time work, the balance earning from 13 to 20 hours credit each. Three-fourths of the students maintaining a perfect record are residents of Michigan, three are from Ohio, and Wisconsin and Missouri are represented by one student each. The list of students follows: John C. Ainslie, Clarence A. G. -Associated Press Photo Andrew Volstead of St. Paul, called the "father" of the Volstead act, at the present time one of the most unpopular laws in the entire his- tory of the United States, was "in- definitely furloughed" as legal ad- visor to the dry law administrator in the St. Paul district. EnrollmenAt Is 'Down Ten Per Cent For Year Total Is Smallest It Has Been In Past Six Years; 1,569 Decrease The enrollment of the University of Michigan dropped 10.5 per cent for the fiscal year which closed June 30, total registration figures covering all sessions being 13,257 or 1,569 less than the total of the year 1931-32. The regular session which came to a close only a few weeks .ago, suffered the smallest loss, showing a drop of only 7 per cent, but inability of teachers to finance courses offered during the year resulted in heavier losses in those divisions. The total is the smallest it has been in six years, the figures for the year closing June 30, 1927 being 13,- 257, exactly the same as this year's total. Michigan students numbered 8,- 656 or 65.26 per cent of the total while students form of the state were 4,606 in number or 34.74 per cent of the whole group. The percentage of Michigan students is slightly less than it has been in recent years, bing 2.3 per cent below the record percentage for students from within the state, 67.6 per cent reached two years ago. The drop is due mainly to the fact that counties in south- eastern M i c h i g a n, particularly Wayne, have lost heavily in their representation here and eastern states, notably New York, New Jersey and Massachusetts, have continued to send larger delegations from year to year. Some idea of where the losses are occurring may be found in a compar- ison of enrollments in the various sessions during the last two years. The total during the regular session this year was 8,968 as against 9,707 in 1931-33. In the Summer Session of 1932 it was 3,757 as against 4,- 328 the preceding year. The exten- sion had 2,155 this year and 2,608 the previous year. The losses were divided almost equally between men and women in the regular and Sum- mer Session, but the total men drop- ped off most heavily in the exten- sion classes. Men enrolled in exten- (Continued on Page 4) U. S.'s Future DependentOn School-mFrank Says Nation's Institutions Should Not Be Impaired By Drastic Budget Cutsl System Threatened With Emasculation Wisconsin President Calls Schools Most Important Government Function CHICAGO, July 3.-UP')-Upon the nation's education system has fallen chief responsibility for guiding the way along new political, social and economic paths, President Glenn Frank of the University of Wiscon- sin said today. Addressing the 71st Annual Con- vention of the National Educational Association, Dr. Frank said the old order had changed, that America stood at the crossroads and that it fell upon public schools to determine which course should be taken. He said it was imperative that educational facilities not be impaired through drastically reduced budgets. Threatened With Emasculation He charged that the country's schools were threatened with emas- culation at the hands of "dishonest reductionists," determined to "shift blame for the depression to the sol- diers of government and stopped by the starvation, the extensions of governmental activities, "c o m p e 1 government to return to the simp- ler role of a simpler day." Education, Dr. Frank said, was, after a provision of relief and pro- tection of life and property, the "most important simple obligation resting upon government." Old Concepts Failed Old political, social and economic concepts had failed, he said, and must be replaced by new patterns demanded by an age of science and. technology.I What he described as " inflexible traditions" was waging a battle with "flexible intelligence," a quality that only proper education could give Americans. Exercises of this intelligence, Dr. Frank said, could alone determine whether youth in the future would be able to resist the pressures of Alarmists, cadvocates of ultra-reac- tionary doctrines and radicals. He urged that more emphasis be placed on education for the public than ever, that institutions of learn- ing be attuned to the demands of a more complete order of things. Leading Shares $1-$10 During Buying Before Roosevelt Message Given Much Credit Wheat Up To Best Price In Three Years; Dollar Value Decreases NEW YORK, July 3.-U(P)-Uncle Sam's explosion of fireworks at Lon- don today ignited his markets at home and prices flared up spectacu- larly. Stocks and commodity exchanges, inflamed by what they regard as the inflationary tone of President Roose- velt's message to the World Economic Conference, handled huge volumes of business as traders read "higher prices" in the pointed statement of the executive. Leading shares climbed $1 to more than $10 under a momentum of buy- ing that reached its peak as the market was closing and the final As- sociated Press-Standard Statistics composite, $92.30, was the highest since September, 1931. The day's av- erage gain was $3.40. Sales totaled 6,746,650 shares. Wheat Highest In 3 Years Wheat swarmed up to the best prices of the last three years, and other grains were strong. Cotton touched the best levels since the spring of 1931, but its extreme ap- preciation of around $2 a bale was not fully maintained. By the same tokens, dollar ex- change flopped badly, United States currency going to fresh lows in terms of European monetary units. Ster- ling lifted to $4.48%, up 14% cents, compared with its old gold standard parity of .$4R6%. While markets left no doubt as to how they viewed the President's statement, quieter corners of the financial community privately ex- pressed their approval of his mes- sage. High banking quarters pointed out that the position of the United States had been made clear and that the fog of confusion which had clung to the currency question had been dissolved. Some bankers privately character- ized Mr. Roosevelt's remarks as a "rebuke' to the foreign gold bloc. His assertions should, they said, re- mind London delgations that the future fortunes on the dollar were primarily a matter for internal de- cision and that stabilization talk at this juncture in the domestic price- raising program was dead. Dr. Niels Bohr Will Speak On Light And Life' Dr. Niels Bohr, professor of theo- retical physics at the University of Copenhagen, Denmark, will speak on "Light and Life" in a public lecture on the Physics Symposium series at 10 a. m. -tomorrow in the west lec- ture room of West Physics Building. Known as the founder of the mod- ern theory of atomic structure and one of the most brilliant living physicists, Dr. Bohr speaks in a manner which is described by physics department authorities as "far from technical." Recent developments in physics have made it necessary to go back to the fundamental problems concerning the properties of matter and consequently Dr. Bohr deals in his lectures with the elementary con- cepts of physics in a highly theoreti- cal form. Doug And Mary Silent On Plans For Divorce LOS ANGELES, July 3.-OP)-Sep- arated by thousands of miles, Mary Pickford, "somewhere in southern California," and Douglas Fairbanks in London, were equally silent to- night after the actress' announce- ment that they contemplated living apart and possibly being divorced. Miss Pickford was not at the pala- tial estate "Pickfair," which has been the residence - of the famous film Stocks Leap ToTwo-Year Hig'h Record Rocket Wave Of Close Parents Announce Secret Wedding of Prominent Junior Catherine Moule, '35, who attended the University for the past two years, will not return to school in the fall. According to a recent announcement by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Day Moule, of Detroit, she was se- cretly married a year and a half ago to Winthrop Jones Spence, of the same city. The couple plan to make their home in the automobile city and it is definitely understood that Mrs. Spence will not return to school, at least in the near future. She is a member of Apha Chi Omega sorority and was prominent in women's activ- ities while on the campus. I Two Excursions On Calendar For Outing Series This Week A total of 58 students have already indicated that they will participate in the tour of the Ford plant at River Rouge on the Summer Session Excur- sions series tomorrow, 33 having re- served places in the special bus and 25 having made arrangements to go by private car, it was learned last night. Some reservations are still available. Prof. Wesley H. Maurer, director of the tours, said that those who go in private cars will be transported about the factory grounds in a Ford Motor Company bus furnished for the occa- sion. The party, which will leave Ann Arbor at 12:45 n. m. will inspect the under the personal supervision of Prof. Laurence M. Gould, prominent polar explorer and a member of the geology department faculty this sum- mer, who will lecture during the tour on the geology of the region. Professor Gould, who was a mem- ber of the faculty here before he gained fame as the second in com- mand of the Byrd Antarctic expedi- tion in 1928, lectured on the subject of the Falls here last week. Members of the Niagara party will take the 14-mile gorge trip Saturday afternoon. This trip begins near the International Bridge, crosses into Canada, and passes the Whirlpool