4 ESTABLISHED 1890 C, - r t t augxl MEMBER. ASSOC IATED PRESS VOL. XXXVII. No. 52 EIGHT PAGES ANN ARBOR. MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1926 EIGHT PAGES PRICE FIVE CENTS' e MICHICAN'S SHARE IN Grid-Graph To Show Difagrammed Report INDSTR DICUSED f Army-.Navy Game MICHIGAN SORORITIES'LS O g FCE'pHj KAPPA PHI HONOR HOLD FOURTH ANNUAL inu jFRAENTINSTALLS PAN-HF! ip NICfANP.F 1 CHAPTER Al MIflHMfl Middies And Cadets YOSTMFN SCHEDULED Aid tDedicaion Of Soldiers' FedTO MEET CHICAGO IN, _ . -'flflnnirAATflhiI noflf BY WHITE OVER RADIO RESEARCH HEAD EXPLAINS USE AND ESTABLISHMENT OF HIS I)EPAXTMENT SUNDWALLALSO SPEAKS Berry Advises Advancement for School Children in MichIgan Who Are Physically Handicapped I Complete reports of the Army-Navy football game will be given by the grid-graph this afternoon in Hill auditorium. Direct connections have been established with Soldiers' field,f ir Chicago, to insure the efficiency of{ the diagrammed story. The Varsity band will play at the showing and parade before and after the game. Reports of other games will be announced between lalves and' during time-out periods. Members of! the 1926 Varsity football squad willI be guests of honor and will occupy seats directly in front of the board. If 1111 I ILLA.L..L. I UIJ JI IUL I AUTUMN DECORATION PLAN FOLLOWED IN ADORNING UNION BALLROOM IS 0 Prof. Albert E. White, director of The board will be operated by the! the department of engineering re- same men who have controlled it for search brought out the importance >f Tickets will all be at the same the University of Michigan's part in price 35 cents, which will admit the the industrial changes which are con- bearer to any seat in the auditorium. stantly taking place, in a radio talk They are on sale at Slater's, Graham's, on the Furth Michigan Night Radio Wahr'sdandsCalkins-Fletcher's State program broadcast through The De- street drug store. The box office of troit News station WWJ. the auditorium will also sell tickets It was to cope with these constant from the time the doors open until the changes that the Department of En- game starts. The doors will be opened gineerig Research was established, at 2 o'clock, one hour before the game Professor White stated. "To date commences. the department has completed or in-1 All of the M men of the football itiated work on 650 projects. Each squad may procure their complimen- project is placed under the personal tary tickets from A. S. Baker at the direction of a competent person, Administration building. ; usuallya member of the faculty. We feel we are better fitted to do develop- Uient than operating research. The1 University has done much in the de- velopmg line to aid all lines o m- dustry, Professor White said. Fish Curator Speaks Others who gave talks on the pro- gram were Dr. John Sundwall, di- rector of the division of hygiene, pub- More Costumes Will be Used In "Front lic health and physical education, Carl Page Stuff" Than In Previous Hubbs, curator of fishes at the Mu- Michigan Operas seum, and Prof. Charles Scott Berry,- of the School of Education. Dr. Sund- TICKETS ARE ON SALE wall explained the health service ______ which the University gives to its stu- Colored costume dents and other provisions which have Cldcsue plates and advance been made to make the health of su- information received yesterday by E. dents the best possible. Mortimer Shuter, Opera director, from The subject of Professor Berry'sI Lester, designer of the 400 costumes talk was "Handicapped School Chil- and gowns which will be used in dren in Michigan." Ie advised "Front Page Stuff," give promise that further advancement of schools for much is being dofe in order that the the partially sighted. The totally blind 1927 Opera will surpass any of its are elly provided for in the Michigan predecessors in beauty and variety of Schoolp for the Blind and the Michigan costume effect. Employment institution for the B nlind. More costumes will be used in this This is also true of the partially deaf year's Opera than in any other former school children, Professor Berry said. production, 57 trunks being required "These children are handicapped in to transport the trappings while the school, on the playground and in the company is on the road, which does shoe. onThe agheouned ano matter not include the personal wardrobes I where placed, who always find them- for each member of the cast. In the selves in the back seats in the class- course of each presentation this year, room, the lecture hall and the con- the "women" of the choruses will cert., Instruction in lip-reading pro- make 15 complete changes of dress, . duces marvellous results, sight aids and the men's chorus eight, exclusive hearing and the child to his delight of the variety of special chorus cos- seems to discover that his hearing has tume changes. improved," Professor Berry said and One of the most prominent numbers, added that these children might be "My Lady of the Snows," will un- m duch better provided for. doubtedly take its place among the m Tells of Cripples rfinest senes the Opera has ever ac- Crippled children are being welli complished, according to Lester, who cared for by the Michigan Society for ideclares that "there is no doubt that Crippled Children and much treatment the 'Lady of the Snows' djumber, i is being given those fdr whom there four parts, introducing the ladies of is a possibility of being cured. There ithe snow, the snowmen, the leading is not enough being done yet to fol-. lady and the ballet dancers, is one of low uPgthe treatment which these the most magnificent spectacles ever Spoorchilren receive, Professor Berry attempted on the stage, and will equal averred, and the same is true of the anything ever seen in any New York feeble inded children. There is less production. There is probably no done fpr the feeble minded than for other scene of equal beauty, except anyj fthe otherbhandicapped school perhaps the 'Palace of Diamonds' childxeit and it is here that the big- used in Fred Stone's 'Criss-Cross,' gestadvane iht bs e tmahe whicr is now playing at the Globe The subject of the talk given by Carl theater in New York." The costumes THubbs ws "Fishes from the Pacific." for this number will be elaborate He explained "th collections of the creations of various combinations of Michigan museum and told about the real lace, velvet, silk, fur, all in white, last collecting expedition made this and rhinestones, and altogether are year. le gave facts about some of probably the most valuable gowns the specimens obtained. Questions that have ever been used in any Union asked by a radio fan and fisherman Opera. were answered by Mr. Hubbs during Other scenes, featuring costumes o his talk and the purpose of the Uni- novelty will exhibit a specialty chorus versity in makingthis collection was in gorgeous mnediaeval e wns,tailed also explained. i golf costumes in exclusive Paris golf costumes. * S.PLANE PN-10 Union members who did not secure FORCED TO LAND applicatios for tickets to Ann Arbor AT CANAL ZONEr pertormfances of "Front Page Stuff"i AT CANAL ZONay gettickets from 2 to 5 o'clock today at the side desk in the Union (By Associated Press) ijloby. COLON, Panama, Nov. 26.-The bb United States naval plane PN-o, DR RASMUSSEN number two, arrived at the Coco Solo station here at about 5:30 o'clock TO VISIT HERE this evening from the Isle of Pines. Lieutenant-Commander Bartlett, pilot, and the members of the crew were Dr. Knud Rasmussen, Ph. D., prom- given a great ovation when they inent Danish explorer, will be in Ann i landed, Arbor next week as a guest of Prof. Commander Bartlett announced that W. H. Hobbs of the geology depart- the flight proved the feasibility of ment. He will give an illustrated lee- getting planes from the United States ture Wednesday, Dec. 8, at 4:15 to the Canal Zone quickly under all o'clock in Natural Science auditori- conditions. lie said he would have um on "Tree Years of Eskimo Life made the destination without diffi- in Arctic America." culty only for a shortage of lubricat- This lecture will be supplemented ing oil while over the Isle of Pines, with both lantern slides and moving ;which compelled him to stop there. pictures taken during the three years The plane was attempting a non-stop of his 20,000 mile journey by dog team' fight from Norfolk, Virginia, to Colon. from Greenland to Alaska across MANY BREAKFASTS HELD Music Furnished by I2-Piece Orchestra From Detroit; Specialty Dancing Adds to Festivities By Marian L. Welles With decorations appropriate to the season, carrying out an atmosphere of russet autumn, the Pan-Helleni ball, the fourth annual social function of this kind to be sponsored by the Michigan Inter-sorority association, was held last night in the Union ball room. The ballroom was attractively adorned with festoons of wine-colored leaves extending from the ceiling to the floor. Bowers of palms and bril- liantly colored flowering plants were formed at various points about the room and elaborate motifs of colored leaves .and artificial grasses were hung over the fireplace and the chape- rone's booth. The orchestra platform was banked in flowers and ferns. Small potted evergreens footed each panel in the corridor leading into the ballroom; the w h o e decorative scheme carried out a seasonal atmos- phere which was intensified by an open fire, in the fireplace and n- shaded cathedral candles. II rusee's Orchestra Played Music for the ball was furnished by Bob Prusee's 12-piece orchestra from Detroitsand continued until 1:30. Specialty dancing by a young member of the band of musicians added to the festivity of the evening. Colored lights were thrown on the dancers from the balcony. 0 The Pan-Hellenic ball is the only large social function of the year given by the women of the University and has long held a prominent place on1 the social callendar of the year. The party of this year has taken on an added interest because of its location1 in the Union ballroom.1 1)Patrons and Patronesses The patrons and patronesses for the ball were: President and Mrs. Clar- ence Cook Little, Dean and Mrs. Burs- ley, Dean and Mrs. Effinger, Dean Humphreys, Dr. and Mrs. Robert Angell, Prof. and Mrs. Frayer, Dr. and Mrs. Aiton, Mr. and Mrs. Waldo Abbott, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Mans- field, Mr. and Mrs. Clingman, Dr. Everette Brown, Miss Grace Richards,, Miss Alice Lloyd and Miss Beatrice Johnson. I The programs for this year were attractive pig skin cigarette cases with an embossed Michigan seal. Ac- cording to the custom one-fourth of the tickets were alloted to independ-~ ent women. A total of 375 couples were present. Following the ball, many sororities held breakfasts at their houses con- tinuing festivities until three o'clock this morning. Schedules Made For, Track And Baseball CHICAGO, Nov. 26.-University of Michigan track and baseball sched- ules as announced here today, for the 1927 season, are as follows: Track: Iowa at Ann Arbor, May 7; Illinois at Ann Arbor, May 14; Ohio at Columbus, May 21. Baseball: Purdue at Purdue, April1 20; Northwestern at Ann Arbor, April 2$; Purdue at Ann Arbor, May 4; Illinois at Ann Arbor, May 7; Ohio at Ann Arbor, May 9; Illinois at Illinois, May 14; Iowa at Iowa, May 16; North- western at Northwestern, May 20; Margaret Funk, '28A Chairman of the committee inf charge of the Pan-hellenic ball, annual social function given by the Michigan Inter-sorority association last night in the Union ballroom. HOWELL WILL DISCUSS CONDJTIQNSOF RUSSIA Recently Returned to Lecture in thiss Country After Several Years of European Study IS MICHIGAN GRADUATE Chester Harvey Rowell, '88, editor and educator, will deliver a University lecture on Russia at 8:00 Monday fnight in Natural Science auditorium. Mr. Rowell's lecture was originally intended for last Monday night, butr because of a misunderstanding with a booking agency the lecture was postponed one week.- Mr. Rowell has spent several years in Europe studying conditions, and has recently returned to America to lecture on his impressoins of modern Russia. He is considered an authority on the subject. Besides taking a leading part in re- form movements, Rowell has taken considerable interest in the entire cause of international co-operation.I 1867, and received his doctor's degree :He was born in Bloomington, Ill., in from the University in 1888 and re- mained for another year of graduate work. He also attended the universi- ties of Halle, Berlin, Paris and Rome. Mr. Rowell has been connected with the faculty of the University of Cali- fornia, as a lecturer in journalism., and also on civil and political sub- jects. From 1898 until 1920 Mr. Rowell was editor and publisher of the Fresno Republican, what is consider- ed by critics as "the best paying news- paper of America." ie is a regent of the University of California. For several sessions Rowell has been aE United States Representative in Con- gress, being affiliated with the editingI of various Congressional digests and report s. Fickinger Advises Curtailing Dialects IOWA CITY, Ia., Nov. 26.-English will be the real auxilairy language of! the future if it can be prevented from degenerating into dialects. believes, Prof. Roy C. Flickinger, head of the Iniversity of Iowa, department of Latih and Greek. "Latin degenerated into the various romance dialects," declared Professor ENROLLS 2 FACULTY MEN AS CHARTER MEMBERS; TEN OTHERS INITIATED DEAN KRAUS PRESIDES Admission To Be Based On Scholar- ship, Personality, And Efficiency In Serving School Phi Kappa Phi, national scholastic honor society, installed a chapter at the University'of Michigan last night with the admission of 25 members of the faculty as charter members and the initiation of 10 more members of the faculty. Dean Kraus of the Col- lege of Pharmacy presided at the initiation and at the banquet which followed. The installation was in the hands of Prof. L. H. Pammel of Iowa State "college and Dean J.. S. Stevens of the University of Maine, both of whom were charter,members of Alpha chapter at its inception at the Uni- versity of Maine in 1898. The installation came last night as the result of a petition to the national chapter last summer. Seven members of the faculty are members of chap- ters at other universities and they felt that there was a place on the campus for such an organization. The mem- bers of the society included President C. C. Little, and Dean Kraus. Accord- ing to Dean Kraus of the pharmacy college, the organization is more com- 1 prehensive in its scope than any of the other honor societies on the campus at the present time. Threefold Requirements The requirements for admission are, (high scholarship,tdistinctive efficiency and service to the University, and outstanding personality reflected by connections with associates and fac- ulty. Its point of departure from the policies of other honor societies is that it recognizes no specialized academic requirements. Any member of the University, regardless of his Imajor subjects or the college to which he belongs, is eligible for membership after his junior year. In this feature the scholars of the campus are rep- resented regardless of specialties or schools. Kraus Elected Head The officers of the Michigan chapter, elected at the meeting following the installation are, Dean Edward H. Kraus, president; Dean Edmund E. Day, vice president; Prof. Edwin M. Baker, secretary; and John C. Christ- ensen, treasurer. ' The installation and initiation last night was confined to members of the faculty. The first initiation to in- clude seniors and graduates of the University will take place in June, 1927. (Continued on Page 3) Tornadoes Scourge West Leaving Paths Of Calamity Behind BULLETIN (By Associated Press) COLUMBIA, S. C., Nov. 26.-A heavy windstorm struck two cities in western South Carolina late today, causing considerable prop- erty damage and injuring 12 per- sons. No loss of life occurred, reports indicated. (By Associated Press) ST. LOUIS, Nov. 26.-Tornadoes -which swept through the Missouri Ozarks last night killed at least four pe sons. injured between 75 and 100 petsons and left a trail of property !destruction. Striking first at Grandsville, near the Arkansas line, a tornado took three lives and destroyed about three- fourths of the buildings. Apparently a different tornado struck at Competition, 75 miles north- west of Grandsville and tore a de- structive path in a northeasterly di- rection througheBig Piney, Vida and IKnobview where it seemed to have spent most of its force. A 50 mile wind, however, blew as far northeast as St. Louis. Nearly all the buildings in Competition and Big Piney were demolished. I Legal Of Talent Debates Admissibility Doiheny Senate Testimony As Evidence (By Associated Press) CHICAGO, Nov. 26.-Ranked in col- umns across a snow swept field, 3,000 students of the United States Military and Navy academies today shared in the dedication of Soldiers' field, where tomorrow the 22 men representing the Army and Navy football teams, will hold the eyes of 100,000 spectators in the first service game ever played in the Middlewest. Thousands of spectators assembled in the vast stadium today braving a bitter wind and a driving, biting snow to attend the ceremonies dedicating the city's monument to its war dead, in which Vice-President Charles G. Dawes made the principal speech. The cadets paraded from their re- spective hotel quarters to the stadium in the face of icy flakes and the sharp winds of Lake Michigan, to find a colorful picture awaiting them, and to take their place in the concrete bowl which they studded with their blue and gray uniforms. An American Legion section presented a pageant depicting the history, of the flag, and behind them were service men of allied na- tions, carrying their °respective na- tional colors. OIL COINSPIRACY TRIAL DEAE Y RTR PROSECUTION IS SCORED (By Associated Press) WASHINGTON, Nov. 26.-Heavy siege oratory in the Fall-Doheny oil conspiracy trial today tied the pro- ceedings into a constitutional knot. the outcome of which still was in doubt when court recessed until Mon- day. While witnesses waited, and with jury excluded, the opposing batteries of big calibre legal talent poured an incessant fire of arguments upon a salient regarded as vital by both sides. The focal point of the broadside was the question of the admissibility as I evidence of the testimony given before the Senate oil investigating committee in 1923 and 1924 by Edward L. Doheny. Included in this testimony is Doheny's own story of how he advanced $100,000 to Albert B. Fall, co-defendant, while the latter was Secretary of the In- terior. Before the day was over, the hostilities had spread along the whole legal front, with defense attorneys accusing the prosecution of disregard- ing the rules of evidence and present- ing its case in improper sequence. But 'the question of admitting Doheny's Senate committee testimony remained j throughout the key salient. The ques- tion never before has been presented for adjudication in a Federal court. In their opening statements, govern- ment counsel dwelt at length upon a I $100,000 cash transaction between Doheny and Fall during the period of the alleged conspiracy January 1, 1921, and December 11, 192g.} Doheny appeared before the Senate committee January 24, 1924, and told freely of having arranged to transfer 1 $100,000 to Fall in 1921. The govern- ment wishes to incorporate this testi- Imony into the trial record but the de- fense objects on the ground that such procedure would constitute compul- sory testimony of the defendant against himself in a criminal trial, an action specifically prohibited by the fifth amendment of the constitution. The government presses for the ad- mission because it has not the right, under the rules of evidence, to sum- mon the defendants to the stand in the present trial. SCUDDER WILL TALK ON INDIA Doctor Is On Furlough From Madros Where He Directs Hospital Under the auspices of the Student I Volunteer group, Dr. Galen Scudder ItWZI NJVIALL IAHUI SCHOOLS HAVE NOT MET FOR SEVEN YEARS BECAUSE OF STUDENT SPIRIT BAR MINNESOTA SHIFT Northwestern Will Play Illinois, Ohio, Utah; Notre Dame To Meet Sothern California (By Associated Press) CHICAGO, Nov. 26.-The shift play will be virtually barred in Western Conference football next year, through a decision of the athletic directors here tonight to enforce a two second stop on all shift plays, before the ball is snapped. Seeking to complete his schedule, Coach Spears of Minnesota, who gave I to the gridiron the famous play a score of years ago, offered to abandon the shift if the other coaches desired, and a gentleman's agreement was adopted. Coach Robert Zuppke, of Illinois, was one of the sponsors of the proposal to make shifting players for two seconds before a 'play was started. No Games In Seven Years The meeting next fall between Chi- cago and Michigan is one of the out standing results of the session. They have not played for seven years be- cause, as Coach Stagg once said,of tension between the undergraduates. The reported break of football rela- tions between Chicago and Northwest- ern, rivals for 25 years, also became an accomplished fact by failure to sign for next year. Six big intersectional games are o the middlewestern list for this'fal, three in this section and three in the East. The rambling rock of Notre Dame will bring one of'the biggest intersec- tional games of the year to Chicago on Nov. 26, when they meet the Uni- versity of Southern Clifornia. The three eastern games will send Ohio to Princeton, and Indiana and Purdu~e to 1larvard. In return, the Navy will com to Michigan and Penn will return the visd of l'hiago. From the far West, Utah will come to North- western's new stadium. All but three of the conference teams still had open dates tonight, when the athletic directors adjourned and negotiations with other leading teams for intersectional games will be contmnued. Chicago, Michigan and Northwestern alone announced com- plete programs. Only One Break Of all the reported breaks in tradi- tional games, only the Chicago-North- western report proved true. When Minnesota announced willingness to drop the shift, Michigan signed up for a continuance of their annual battle. Wisconsin, after long argument, sign- ed up again for the traditional finale at Chicago. Illinois and Ohio meet again to close the season, and Purdue and Indiana as usual. The eastern trip of Utah marks the first visit to the Big Ten from a leader of the Rocky Mountain conference, and the Southern California visit to Chicago will give the Middlewest its first sight of Pacific coast football. Purdue and Indiana barely kept within the conference four game mini- mum, while all the others, except Chi- cago and Michigan, landed five games and these two signed up six North- western vied with Chicago this time in signing up home games, each get- ting five. The following is the complete schedule for all Big Ten games for the 1927 season: Minnesota: Indiana, Iowa, Wiscon- sin, Notre Dame, Michigan. Northwestern: South Dakota, Utah, Ohio, Illinois, Purdue, Indiana, Iowa. Illinois: Bradley, Northwestern, Michigan, Iowa, Chicago, Ohio. Ohio: Iowa, Northwestern, Mich- igan, Chicago, Princeton, Illinois. Iowa: Ohio, Minnesota, Illinois, Wis- consin, Northwestern. Wisconsin: Kansas, Michigan, Pur- due, Minnesota, Iowa, Chicago. Purdue: DePauw, Chicago, Wis consin, Northwestern, Indiana. Chicago: Indiana, Purdue, Pennsyl- vania, Ohio, Michigan, Illinois, Wis- consin. Indiana:.Chicago, Minnesota, Notre Dame, Harvard, Northwestern. Pur- due. MEXICO CITY.-Prince Henry of Prussia, brother of the former Ger- man emperor, has arrived at Vera, Cruz. Wisconsin at Wisconsin, May 21; Iowa Flickinger, "and unless remedical at Ann Arbor, May 28; Wisconsin at danger that English may become a Ann Arbor, May 30; Ohio at Ann Ar- I measures are taken, there is grave1 bor, June 4. hybrid language." ROUMANIAN KING REPORTED DYING AS HIS QUEEN HASTENS HOMEWARD I t ] 1 ( ' tl ij (By Associated Press) several London newspapers describe LONDON, Nov. 26.-The Bucharest his condition as more serious than correspondent of the Westminster heretofore. The special Mail corre- Gazette says King Ferdinand of Rou- spondent declares that the official re- mania "is not expected to live until port issued at Bucharest are unjusti-~ morning." The dispatch, bearing to- # fiably sanguine. day's (Friday's) date, adds that blood --- . f y will speak at 8 o'clock tonight in Lane Hall auditorium on "Medicine in In- dia." Dr. Scudder is here on fur- lough from his position as physician-in- congestion of the large intestine, due ( ty Associatedtress) 'charge the Ranipet General nos to cancer, is causing blood poisoningj BELGRADE, Jugo-Slavia, Nov. 26.- 1. pital, the hospital of the Reformed Bucharest is described as "waiting Queen Marie of Roumania, advices Foreign Professor Church Mission boards in Madros,n cup d' etat." from Bucharest say, has lost much of dia. He is also the American repre- A special correspondent sent by the her popularity owing to her absence iConcludes Research sentative in the Madros Medicalcoun- Daily Mail to Bucharest to investigate ;inAmerica, and will not be allowed I'cil, a body which controls the medical the condition of the king, telegraphed Ito interfere in questions of state upon profession of the Madros presidency from Bucharest that Ferdinand is her return. -I Dr. Erik Hulthen, of Denmark, who and the medical policies of the gov- desperately ill with cancer of the These advices state that it is even has spent the last year in residence ernment. 1927 FOOTBALL SCHEDULE I The complete Michigan sched-