THE MICHIGAN DAILY '33-'34 Session Shows Decline In Enrollment Largest Decrease Is Noted 'in Extension Division And Summer School 1 Artist's Sketch Of Hutchins Hall and. (Continued from Page 1) Michigan was represented by 7,737 students, a total 919 smaller than it was a Year ago. New York again ranked first among the outside states having students here, with a total enrollment of 906, an increase of 60 over the previous year. Other states having compara- tively large representation here ranked as follows: Ohio, 713; Illinois, 494; Pennsylvania, 373; and Indiana, 270. Foreign enrollment dropped only four from last year's figures, with 256 students enrolled. Forty-three countries and provinces were repre- sented as against 50 the previous year. China, with 78 enrolled, was the leader. Ontario was second with 45, Porto Rico third with 16, and the Philippine Islands fourth with 12. The ratio of men to women in at- tendance at the regular session was approximately five to two, with the respective totals being 6,287 and 2,486. Altogether, 8,773 students attended the regular session. These figures also decreased proportinately from 1932- 33, when there were 6,461 men and 2,507 women in attendance, with a total enrollment of 8,968. The per cent of decrease in the total enroll- ment was 2.2. In the 1933 Summer Session there were only twice as many men as wom- en enrolled, a total of 2,962 being divided into 2,005 men students and 957 women students.nThe 1932 Sum- mer Session had 2,453 men and 1,304 women enrolled, totaling 3,757. The" percentage of decrease in the en- rollment of women was surprisingly, larger than that of the men, being 26.6 per cent to 18.3 per cent. The Extension Division, during-the year of 1933-34, declined in total registration to 1,828 from the total of the previous year. 2,155. This de- crease was almost wholly attributable to the falling off of the number of women registered, since the number of men students registered was only four off the 1932-33 number of 711. On the other hand, women's registra- tion receded from 1,444 to 1,121, a loss of 22.4 per cent. The total University enrollment, 12,301, was the least since the fiscal year, 1923-24, when 12,291 were en- rolled. College Teachers Called To Politics, x * M Dedication Of Law Quadrangle Is Attended By Noted Jurists Law Quadrangle Roosevelt Is Set For Trip To West Coast )Allocates Drought Relief; Goes Over Possibilities For Commission Posts' HYDE PARK, N. Y., June 25. --- P) - President Roosevelt began today a an intensive week to arrange affairs of state, prior to his departure Satur- [ day for his long planned cruise to 4 Hawaii and the west coast. y Before leaving tonight for the Cap- ital he took up the last of the bills passed by the recent Congress and went over the list of recommendations j for ,the two new important commis- ;? sions to be selected - the stock ex- change and communications agencies. He allocated $150,000,000 of drouth relief funds last night. Talks To Governor Lehman ~ The President took advantage of his brief stay here at the family home to talk with state political leaders. Governor Lehman and Edward J. Flynn, state secretary of state and Bronx leader, were dinner guests yes- terday. While none of the participants in this meeting would talk, it was as- sumed Governor Lehman would run for re-election this fall on the Dex- ocratic ticket with the full support T D Aof President Roosevelt. So far as poli- J.1~I j tics are concerned, the President stated on this trip that party affilia- tions did not count in the federal WASHINGTON - The department campaign for better days. He is ex- of justice discussed plans of employ- pected by his aides to give unstinted ing the United States army and na- support to those aiding in the ad- tional guard in assisting in the search ministration program, regardless of for John Dillinger. party.1 Mr. Roosevelt allocated the first of SANTA BARBARA, Calif.- The the dro.uth relief funds last night in1 condition of Marie Dressler, famous an executive order which specifiede movie star, was reported 'improved' $56,250,000 for direct aid to the states by her physician. Miss Dressler has in the stricken area been ailing from heart and kidney The remainder of the first dis-1 illnesses. tribution of Federal relief for the1 drouth area included $43,750,000 for BISMARCK, N. D. -- Gov. William purchase of seed, food and live stock;t Langer of this state closed his cam- $25,000,000 for seed and feed loans;r paign for choice of the non-partisan $12,500,000 for purchase of lands int party and. Republican gubernatorial the drought regions; and $12,500,000 r nominee in the coming primaries. for establishment of civilian conser-t vation camps in the stricken region.C CHICAGO --Grain prices on the May Confer With Farley I Chicago Board of Trade tumbled be- It was expected that Postmastert cause of the greatly increased move- General Farley, national and state ment of new wheat in the Southwest. dtmocratic chairman, might come here today to confer with the Presi- LONDON - Great Britain re- dent. This offers opportunity for dis- mained ready for an Anglo-German cussion of the state political situationt trade war while awaiting peace over- as well as selections for the new gov-t tures from the latter country in a dis- ernment agencies to be filled this pute over the German foreign loan week. Farley already has declared for moratorium, re-election of Governor Lehman. ~-~-~~It is the hope of the President that - NEW YORK-Edward West (Dad- he will have his desk cleared on Fri- t dy) Browning, millionaire real estate day night. In that event he will board 1 operator, was reported in a serious the cruiser Houston at Annapolis, t condition - at a local hospital. He is Maryland on Saturday and begin hisc suffering from joint diseases, tour of the American possessions, in- . cluding Puerto Rico, the Virgin t EX-GOVERNOR HAS STROKE Islands, the Panama Canal Zone ando CHAPEL HILL, Tenn., June 25.-- Hawaii. Stops also will be made in- ( P)-Suffering from a paralytic stroke, Columbia, South America and in thea Henry H. Horton, 68-year-old former Republic of Panama.t governor of Tennessee, was in a criti- Returning to the Pacific coasta cal condition today at his farm home early in August, Mr. Roosevelt will c near here. travel overland by rail, and there isb (Continued from Page 1) With the dedication on June 15 o the Law Quadrangle, the University officially accepted the $5,000,000 gif of one of its outstanding alumni Provision for the erection of the group of buildings which includes dormitories, class rooms, a library and the administrative offices of th Law School was made in the will o: William W. Cook, '82L, who be- queath to his alma mater more than $10,000,000. The Law Quadrangle was actually completed only with the opening of Hutchins Hall last September: This building is the Law School proper for it houses the class rooms and of- fices of the school. It closes in the southwest corner of the huge block which the quadrangle occupies, the other sides being made up of the dining hall, the Lawyers Club, John P. Cook dormitory, and the legal re- search library. The value of the new 'group of buildings in their relation to the Fred Crandall Directs, Acts In Same Play Registration Is Continued For f t e3 s ,! e w - teaching of law and work of the Law! School in general was expressed by Dean Henry M. Bates when the final unit in the group was opened last fall. The group constitutes an arrange- ment of working and living conditions which will stimulate high standards of work and develop a proper esprit de corps, he said. Legal research can CHICAGO, June 25.-(R) -College teachers were calledI upon today to forsake isolation and plunge into the "social and political life of the na- tion." An appeal circulated as the Ameri- can Federation of Teachers opened its 18th annual session asserted that "teachers. need organization which will defend their interests economi- cally and prevent them from being forced to low levels of work and sal- ary upon which it is impossible to maintain any life of culture. "Unless teachers have an organiza- tion to protect them they are likely to be victimized for teaching the truth, if that truth comes into con- flict with the interests of powerful and dominant groups in society." Wistert, Petoskey Now Professionals Has Leading Role In 'One Hundred Years Old,' Now Showing Here (Continued from Page 1) real work was done, however, late at night. The Iydia Mendelssohn The- atre was often occupied until the wee hours of the morning. Dress rehear- sal was held Sunday night and the players rested all day yesterday. Concerning the play itself, Mr. Crandall said: "It is a show of ex- treme delicacy and must be played with a great deal of restraint. It is very quiet and demands a fine intui- tive feeling. Better acting is re- quired than in a play of a more sen- sational, faster-moving nature. "It is a modern Spanish play which belongs to the new school of play- writing that Spain has produced in the last 30 years. It is typical of the school as a whole. The plays in the new school have a depth of emotion, with not much on- the surface. The plots are usually quite scant, and the plays stress characterizations which are usually very finely drawn and beautifully done. "They are not influenced by the Ibsen 'problem' idea, but lean to- wards romanticism and sentiment. 'One Hundred Years Old' is one of the Spanish classics. It has played in London and New York with great success, and has been translated into many foreign languages." Serafin and Joaquin Alarez Quin- teros, the authors of the play, have -been successful in drama, their plays "Women Have Their Way," and "The Lady Frfm Alfa Que Que" having also been hits. Mr. Crandall, who teaches Ad- vanced Acting and Advanced Dra- f now be conducted on a wider scale than ever before attempted by using a the facilities which have been made available to the University, Dean Bates said. f The dedication of the group at- s tracted some of the most noted fig- ures in the judiciary and educational; fields. The chief speakers for the event were Justice Harlan F. Stone of the United States Supreme Court and former dean of the Columbia University law school, Newton D. Baker, Chief Justice Marvin Rosen- berry of the Wisconsin Supreme Court, and Dean Bates. Such crowds attended the ceremonies that the overflow from the dinner which was served in the Lawyers Club had to be accommodated in the Union ball- room. A number of prominent educators , from other institutions have come to I 'Ann Arbor to take part in the sum- mer session of the school. Among these are Hessel E. Yntema, Ph.D., S.J.D., professor of law at Johns Hop- kins University, Albert Charles Ja- cobs, B.C.L., A.M., associate professor of law at Columbia University, and Gustave A. Ohlinger, A.M., L.L.B., of the Toledo, O., bar. These men will' supplement the regular faculty of the school. Dean Bates graduated from the lit- erary college in 1890 with the degree of Ph.D. He received honorary de- grees from Northwestern University and Kalamazoo College. Dean Bates is a member of a number of law so- cieties and has served on the commis- sion for uniform state laws since 1921. He became dean of the Law School in 1910 and has held that position ever since. matic Production along with his. di- recting and acting, has wanted to produce this play for a, long time. Al- though this is the first time he has directed a Repertory Players' pro- duction, he has done "A Mid-Sum- mer Night's Dream," "Cradle Song," "Outward Bound," "The Enemy," and "Ice Bound" for the Ann Arbor high school group. Mr. Crandall graduated from the University in 1929, and since that time has been instructing in Ann Arbor high school and working on his Master's degree. During the winter season he plays in the Bonstelle -Civic Theatre Group at the Art Institute Theatre in Detroit, where T. W. Ste- vens has been directing. This is his fourth summer with the Repertory Players. VICE-PRESIDENT YOAKUM * * * 3 University Delegates To Tour Germany Three representatives of the Uni- versity, along with three delegates from each of 15 other Colleges and Universities will sail Saturday on the Bremen for a two months tour of Germany by invitation of the Karl Schurz society and the American Institute. The three representatives of the University ,re Vice-President Clar- ence Yoakum, Prof. James K. Pol- lock of the political science depart- ment, and John W. Lederle; Grad., former president of the Michigan Union and the Oratorical Association. The purpose of the tour, according to Professor Pollock, is to merely make an extensive tour of the coun- try as observers, noting the variols phases of the government of Germany under Adoph Hitler. Contrary to current rumor neither Professor Pol- lock nor Mr. Yoakum will lecture there. Both "Political Parties and Elec- toral Problems," and "Continental European Governments," courses that Professor Pollock was to teach during the Summer Session will be discon- tinued. MILLS PLANT CLOSES HARRIMAN, Tenn., June 25. - P) -The Harriman Hosiery Mills, one of the largest industrial plants to lose the Blue Eagle, closed down its plant today. A notice said, "The actions of Gen. Hugh Johnson and the NRA have convinced us that they intend to wreck this concern and make its operation impossible." a possibility he, will make some epeeches, probably in Minneapolis, and Green Bay, Wis., where the ter- cententary of the state will be cele- brated. and nieces. L w FOUNTAIN PEN REPAIRING by Factory Experts at RID-ERt'S PEN HOSPITAL 30out State Street Sport Program Intra ural Plan Calls For Competition In Various Summer Sports Registration in all branches of the Intramural sports program will con- tinue throughout the week, with the program getting into full swing next week, it was announced yestet.iay by Randolph Webster, in charge of the Intramural sports activities for the Summer Session. Activities planned include team and individual competition in swim- ming, playground ball, golf, handball, horseshoes, and squash, as well as other games adapted to summer play. All facilities of the Intramural Building, adapted to indoors sports, Ferry Field and South Ferry Field. the University Golf Course and Wa- terman Gymnasium have been made available. Registration for participation in all departments of the summer athletic program may be made in the lobby of the Intramural Building or in the Intramural offices. a n.t John Fischer, Local Business Leader, Dies -John C. Fischer, local hardware merchant, and for many years ac- tive in the business and civic life of Ann Arbor, died early yesterday mor- ning in St. Joseph's Mercy Hospital. Mr. Fischer, who was 68 years old, had been in failing health for several years, but had continued to take an active part in his business until 10 days ago when he was taken critically il. Mr. Fischer was a lifelong resident of Ann Arbor and entered the hard- ware business in 1885 as an employe, entering business for himself four years later. He was the first president of the Ann Arbor Chamber of Commerce, serving three terms in that capacity, and was elected to the board of edu- cation in 1923. He was at one time active in the Masons, Odd Fellows, and Exchange Club, and at one time served as president of the Michigan Retail Hardware Association. Mr. Fischer is survived by a sister, Mrs. Caroline Feldhauser, of Gray- ling, and a daughter, Mrs. Axel Marin, wife of Prof. Marin of the engineering college, as well as several nephews and nieces. Nor i s 302 South State Street m ra___. Immediately following graduation Wthitey Wistert, Michigan's All- American tackle and ace hurler, along with Ted Petoskey, All-Conference end, basketball captain and outfield- er, went to Cincinnati to take up duty with the Reds, National League base- ball team. Wistert, whose salary is rumored at $375 a month, joined the pitching staff and Petoskey will continue as an outfielder. Avon Artz, baseball captain and leading hitter, is playing with a De- troit team, and Herman Everhardus, All-Conference halfback on the grid team, has signed with the recently# formed Detroit professional outfit. Drop around And SeeC Our-- COOL DRESSES All ready for the hot days on the Campus.. Piques, Seersuckers, Voiles, at $5.95up White, pastel, stripe, and print, wash crepes, at $8.95 Sizes from 12 up Special attention given to i Wehave th largest books tthloet L. -_ _ __T BLUE LANTERN BALLROOM Island Lake, 2 Miles E. of Brighton on Grand River Lowry Clark & his Orchestra Dancing Nightly Except Mon. Adm 40c BE KIND TO FOUR CAS, Take Me to Silkworth s 0 q0 u Y 1?- p i,0" ncn h ct III You will find all of your requirements for summer school adequately answered' in either of our two stores.. S LATh R'S. I ti