ESTABLISHED I 1890 it I Li ti MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS 0 VOL. XXXVII. No. 114 EIGHT PAGES ANN ARDOR. MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, MARCH 10, 1927 EIGHT PAGES PRICE -FIVE CENTS - . JAPANESE REFUGEES STRUGGLE TO BRING ORDER FROM CHAOS EARTIIQUAKE KNOWN TO HAVE TAKEN TOLL OF MORE TI'AN 2,000 LIVES 50,000 ARE HOMELESS Towns Of Miyau And Mineyama Are ilt Hardest: Earth Fissures Make Relief Difficult (y Associated Press)j TOKIO, March 9-Thousands of re- fagees In central Japan, shivering, hungry, and in sore need of medical aid, tonight were struggling to bring order out of the chaos created Mon- day night by the earthquake which already is known to have taken a toll I of more than 2,000 lives. Home Offiee Reports The home office this afternoon stat- ed that its latest advices showed that 2,275 persons were killed and 3,441 injured. Information received by To- kio newspapers, however, indicated that the dead in the entire earth- quake region would number more than 3,000 while one newspaper es- timated that the total would amount to 5,000 with from 50,000 to 75,000 homeless. Mineyama is understood to have been hit the hardest, and one unoffi- cial estimate is that fully 2,500 per- sons lost their lives there, either kill- ed by falling building material or caught in the ensuing fire. High Estimates Givenf The T'okio Asahi Shmbun (a news- paper) estimates the dead in the en- tire earthquake region at more than 3,000 while the Tokio Nichi Nichi Shimbun gives 5,000, with from 50,000 to 75,000 homeless. An Asahi correpondent says the town of Amino, of 4,000 population, was nearly destroyed, with the num-] her of dead, and injured inestimable. More than 200 were killed and 500 in- jured in the collapse and burning of a theater. Troops were digging the bodies from the ruins. The refugees, many of them injured, presented a pitiful spectacle, their misery accen- tuated by the snow and cold and their terror continuing owing to constant earth rumblings.- The snow, together with the fis- sures opened in the earth by the con- vulsions, have greatly retarded at- tempts to get relief to the sufferers by automobiles, and food is being car- ried by coolies. Physicians have ar- rived at Iwataki and Yamada and are treating the injured in a constant stream. Scenes are Described Harrowing scenes are described by a correspondent for the Asahi who visited the ruins of Mineyama. Many of the survivors, he says, are wander- ing about aimlessly, seemingly made temporarily insane by their exper-~ ience. One boy was found sitting by a roadside clasping the bones of his father, recovered from the ashes of their home. Numerous cracks were opened in the earth throughout the affected dis- trict, ail in some places fissures are three feet across. Roads were also blocked by landslides and avalanches. It is estimated that three weeks will be required to repair the railways. The province of Tangd is not econ- omically important. Its main indus- trial production is crepe silk, which is made entirely for Japanese consump- tion. Commercial and industrial cen- ters like Osaka, Kobe, Kyoto and Na- goya experienced a severe shock, but official investigation show that the damage in these place's was insignifi- cant and that) business activities are proceeding as ausual. After Shocks Severe A number of the after shocks felt in the Tango district yesterday were severe enough to shake down crumb- ling walls. The telephone and tele- graph lines are still badly crippled. It is reported that a tidal wave, which followed the earthquake, se- verely damaged Yamada and other fishing villages on the coast. FOREIGN STUDENTS PRESENT PROGRAM Michigan's 11th annual Internation- al Night was held last. night in Hill auditorium under the auspices of the Cosmopolitan club. A review of International Night will be found in the Music and Drama column on page four. Students and actors from 11 nations FROW'Mf FROLIC TICKETS I TO BE ON ,SALE TODAYI I I Tickets for the annual Frosh Frolic to be held Friday eve- ning, March 18, in the Union ballroom, will be on gener'al sale today at the main desk in the Union as well as in the lobby of Angell hall, from 2 to 5 o'clock. The ticket sale has been brisk and will continue during the week until the 250 limit has been reached. They are priced "at $5.00 per couple. iI WILL LEAVE TODAY ON SPEAKING TOUR Fielding H. Yostj COACH YOST TO TAKE' SHORT SPEAKING TRIP Will Address Alumni Club And Civic Coups As Well As Ofieite At Collegiate Relays WILL TALK IN DETROIT Fielding I3. Yost, director of inter- collegiate athletics, will leave today for a three week speaking trip through the southern section of the country and will return to speak in Michigan before leaving for an eastern tour. Besides addressing alumni clubs and civic groups Coach Yost will officiate at two collegiate relays and address a college convocation. Tonight he will address the Detroit Athletic club in Detroit. At this gath- ering there will be the athletes and athletic officials of all the Detroit high schools, in addition to the mem- bers of. the athletic club and bus- iness men interested in sports. Coach Yost will not speak again until March 21, when he travels to New Orleans. However, he will not be in Ann Arbor during the inter- vening time. In New Orleans he will speak to a gathering of isouthern alumni. On March 25 Coach Yost wil be an honorary official at the Texas Relays, which is the classic track event of the Southwest. On the day following he will again act in the ca- pacity of official at the Rice Relays in Houston, Texas. Rice College has held relays for numerous years and the 1927 relay is planned to surpass previous meets in the number of con- testants participating. In the evening after the relay Coach Yost will ad- dress the Michigan alumni at Hous- Iton. Coach Yost will then travel north to speak in Tulsa, Okla. on March 28 before a gathering of alumni and college athletic coaches. These addresses will complete his southern itinerary and he is expected to be back in Ann Arbor April 1. On that evening he will address the De- troit Yacht Club, which is holding a Michigan night for the Detroit stu- dents and alumni. Coach Yost will then speak in sev- eral Michigan towns, first at Alma to a group of high school students and members of the Alma civic clubs, and then at the Kiwanis district con- vention at Kalamazoo. These talks will be given on the fifth and sixth of April, respectively. Following his Kalamazoo address, Coach Yost will leave for his eastern trip. He will attenda Michiganealum- ni rally at Washington, D. C., to be held on April 9. Syracuse Uni- versity is holding a convocation on April 26 at which Coach Yost will be the principle speaker. On that same evening he will address the alumni of Schenectady, N. Y. This will complete Coach Yost's speaking tours through the South and East. His general subject for discus- sion is the administrative problems of athletics, however, the majority of his talks will be on sportsmanship and the "athletic attitude." GROUP MAY FORM NEW STUDY CLUB IOrganization of a student Mathe- matics club is the purpose of a meet- ing; to be held tonight at 7:30 in room 3201 Angell hall, at which time Prof. James W. Glover, chairman of the TESTIMONY IN SENATE CONTEMPT CASE MAY BE PRESENTED TWICE MAY BE GIVEN ONCE BEFORE JURY AND ONCE WITh IT EXCLUDED) JUSTICE RITZTO DECIDE' Teslimony On Pertinency of Question Sinclair Refused to Answer Will Begin Today (By Associated Press) WASHINGTON, March 9- Testi- mony in the Senate contempt case against Harry F. Sinclair may be taken twice in the District of Colum- bia Supreme Court, once with the jury excluded and again with the jury present. After listening to all day argument on the question of whether the pert- inency of the questions which the mil- lionaire oil. operator refused to an- swer in the Teapot Dome inquiry is one of law or of fact, Justice Ritz an- nounced late today that he would be- gin taking testimony as to pertinency tomorrow. The jurors, who are under the prac- tice here in a misdemeanor case, are not locked up, would be given a ,hoi- day while the defense and the gov- ernment present large sections of the voluminous record written by the Senate oil committee. After considering this evidence, Justice Ritz will decide whether it shall go to the jury. If he holds that the question of pertinency is one for himself and not the jury to determine, the evidence under the present rul- ings will be withheld from the jur- ors. In that event the only facts the jury would have to determine would be, whether Sinclair was summoned by the Senate committee, whether he appeared, whether the questions set out in the contempt indicment were asked him, and wheher he refused to answer them. Before the lawyers got into their hours of argument, the government formally rested its case without call- ing any additional witnesses, and George T. Hoover, chief counsel for the defense, made his opening state- ment to the jury. HOPKINS TO TELL I OF HIS DISCOVERY B. S. Hopkins, professor of Inor- ganic Chemistry at the University of Illinois, will describe his discovery of Ilinium in a public lecture at 4:15 today in the Chemistry ampitheater, room 165. Dr. Hopkins and his coworkers after several years of work on the' rare earths, finally identified the ele- ment number 61 in the periodic table. The presence of Illinium, which is re- lated to Radium, was determined by certain lines in the x-ray spectrum known to belong to this element, and by certain new bands in the absorp- tion spectrum. This element was named Illinium in honor of the Uni- versity of Illinois where the work was done. Dr. Hopkins has specialized in work on the rare earths and is the author of a book entitled "The Chem- istry of the Rarer Elements. DRIVE CONTINUES SHANGHAI, March 9.-The drive of the Cantonese for the city of Foochow and the attendant threat on Shanghai today were overshadowed momentarily by the possibility of strained relations between the Peking government and Moscow growing out of the arrest of Mlle. Borodin. SHARES PRAISES SOF CLOSE' RIVALS REILEASE OF RUSSIANS FROM CHINESE PRISON DEMANDED BY SOVIET REPRTI S OF O rERS CALLING FOR EXECUTION OF THE COURIER: l)ENIE)D PRESIDENT CI TES RIOT COMPLAINTS! S t THREE TAKEN AS SPIES trained Relations Between Peking' And Moscow Feared When MlIle., Borodin Is Arrested LITTLE TO DRAW UR. RESOLUTION COVERING PREVENTION OF ROTS ACT IESULTS FRO F MEETING OF UNIVERTSITY AND CITY OFFICIALS YESTEtDAY THEATERSCRITICISED Managers Scored For Attitude Toward Students And For Indierence To Police And University Resolutions aimed to prevent recur- rence of Monday night's theater riot will be drafted this morning by Pres- dent Clarence Cook Little as the re- suilt of a conference held yesterday at the City hall, which was attended by the three Ann Arbor police commis- Aioners, Mayor Campbell, Joseph AE. Bursley, dean of students, and Pres- ident Little. The meeting was called to discuss the present student "riot- ing" situation. The management of the Majestic Capt. Edw-ard Chambers The following telegram from thel Purdue basketball coach and mem-i bers of his team was received by Thei Daily last night:I To Coach E. J. Mather and Captain Chambers of the Michigan basket-t ball team: We are taking this opportunity toF congratulate you on winning the Con-< ference basketball championship and on your clean sportsmanlike playing in both games with us, which alsoI characterized the play of the Mich- igan team throughout the season. The 1927 basketball team is a champion in every respect and well deserves the{ title. Coach Ward Lambert and the Purdue Basketball Team. NO FUNDS AVAILABLE~ FR RE'E[D ICOMMITTE11: Headquarters State That Substantial1 Sum Remains For Pennsylvania Ballot Investlgation KEYES REFUSES NOUCHER (By Associated Press) WASHINGTON, March 9.-The Reed campaign funds committee hit an- other snag today when it found the Senate's tax drawer . tightly locked against it. Proposing to proceed with the im- pounding of baliot boxes in the last Pennsylvania election, despite failure of the Senate to act on the resolution continuing its life during the recess, the committee learned today that no funds were avtailable. .Senator Keyes, Republican, New Hampshire, chairman of the commit- tee on audits and control, declined to sign a voucher permitting further use of the $55,000 authorized for the com- mittee. At the committee's head-i quarters, however, it was stated "a substantial sum" of the appropria- tions had not been expended. Opponents of the bill to continue the life of the Reed committee took the, position that the committee is dead7 and it is assumed on this ground that Senator Keyes refused to act when David S. Berry, Senate seargeant at arms, had been given the order of theI committee directing the impounding of ballot boxes in the counties of Dela- ware, Lackawanna, Hillsdale, and Lu- cerne, asked for funds. PRINCETON.-At the conclusion of of a five-day discussion of evolution,I Dr. Henry Fairfield finally admitted that it is a subject that is impossible, to explain. (By Associated Press) MOSCOW, March 9- The Soviet government today renewed its de- mand on Peking that Mlle. Borodin, wife of Michael Borodin advisor to the Cantonese and the three Soviet couriers arrested Saturday on the So- viet vessel Pamiat Lenina be re- leased immediately. Demand Sent To Mission The demand was sent to the Chi-? nese mission in Moscow and was a re- inforcement of a previous note on the matter sent to the Peking authorities. Soviet officials said they recognized that Chang-Tso-Lin, Manchurian war lord, who was reported to have order- ed the execution of the three couriers as spies, was operating entirely in- dependently of the existing govern-- ment at Peking and that consequent- ly there would be some difficulty in securing the prisoners' release. They said, however,thatbno matter would' be neglected to obtain the freedom of those held. Government officials said that they could not believe that Chang-Tso-Lin would go so far as to order the exe- cution of the couriers and added that they were entirely without confirma- tion of such a report. Cites Duty of Soviet It was pointed out that whether Russian citizens were associated or not with the Soviet government, the, Soviet duty was to protect them from arrest in foreign lands where it was! their right, with other foreigners, to move about freely while pursuing their peaceful vocations. , Dispatches from Peking tonight said that the Soviet embassy in Pe- king had sent\ a note of protest to' the Chinese officers there and that the authorities had telegraphed General Chang-Tsung Chang, the Shantungese commander whose troops arrested the Russians, to send them the facts sur- rounding the seizure of the Pamiat L enina. Execution Order Reported Chinese sources reported today that General Chang Tsung Chang had or- dered the execution of the three cour- iers and that the executions had been carried out. Reports that Chang-Tso- lin had ordered the execution of the three Russians were denied at the headquarters of the Ankouchun or Al- lied Northern armies, where it was said that Chang Tsung Chang had full power tp deal with the prison- ers without asking permission of Chang-Tso-Lin. Dispatches from Shanghai said that the Russians had been arrested after a quantity of propaganda material had been found in their baggage designed to assist the Cantonese who are now fighting with the northern- ers. Military plans also were claimed to have been found. The arrests were made by white Russians attached to Chang Tsung Chang's army. Deny Official Connection Mlle. Borodin who only recently was in Shanghai, is the wife of the Cantonese advisor, whom the Soviet authorities have denied was offi- cially connected with the Soviet gov- ernment. All reports so far have in- dicated that she was not in the exe- cution orders which were said to have been given. I 1 i i i i i I Clarence Cook Little CANADA TO PROTEST and Arcade theaters was crticised at the meeting for their attitude toward the students and their indifference to police and University requests. Minister In Washington Will Attemypt jPresident Little declared that students To Settle Issue Of Chicago were so angry with the two theaters Water Diversion that they had requested him to open Hill auditorium for the purpose of SAY LEVELSARE LOWER holding movie shows there until some agreement could be reached with the (ysa PsButterfield interests. He intimated (By Associated Press) that he was not opposed to this plan, OTTAWA, Ont., March 9-While Meeting T1'o Be Called Public Works department officialsrde- "The attitude of the theater owners d cared that diversion of water fromI must be changed before the student' the Great Lakes by Chicago has "ad- attitude will change," the President versely affected Canadian harbors and channels," 0. D Skelton, under-see- declared. An attempt to remedy the retary of state for external affairs, de- situation will be made at a cqnference clared that "satisfactory settlement which will be held between University of this issue would be one of the du-- officials and the Butterfield manage- ofi thse Cu mionisoter at ment. Wshigthe'nadan minist a President Little also cited numer- In a communication to the House ous criticisms which have been pour- of Commons, Mr. Skelton leclared ing into his office regarding the "The Government of Canada has means which the police used in quell- taken every opportunity of commun- ing the mob Monday night. \ It was icating to the Government of the Unit- charged that officers had fired tear ed States its views as to the injury gas cartridges directly at students, done to the levels of the Great Lakes with the result that one man was and the St. Lawrence River and to burned about the eyes and will prob- various Canadian interests by the Chi- ably be permanently scarred. Police cago diversion." Commissioner Joseph Arnet stated in The statement said that the level reply that the officers were made the of Lake Huron has been lowered .6 targets of' eggs, stones and harsh feet, Erie.4 feet and Ontario .4 feet. language and had probaly retaliated The cost of restoring depths and in a manner exceeding their instruc- structures of the department, owing tions. to the reduction of lake surface, said Police Chief O'Brien told the meet- the department officials has been es- ing that his men had been instructed timated in 1924 as $2,515,031,. to fire their cartridges into the ground The Department of Railways and in front of the mob, but in the excite- Canals issued a statement saying that ment may have neglected to do so. the St. Lawrence River has been low- As a further means of preventing ered .4 feet at Prescott, Ont., and .3 future disturbances it was suggested feet at Lake St. Louis. Montreal har- that all pep meetings hereafter be bor has been lowered .37 feet. 0ffi- called in the afternoon, Suggestions cials estimated that, on the opening were also made that the Student coun- of the new Welland Ship Canal, the [cil be called on the occasion of such lowering of the Lake Erie level will disturbances to assist in restoring or- be increased to .7 feet. der by other means than force. The joint engineering board of. Can- Tear Gas lefended ada and the United States reported The use of tear gas in dispersing recently that the water levels of the crowd was defended by Chief Lakes Michigan, Huron and Erie can O'Brien and Commissioner Arnet as be restored by compensating works the most humane method possible un- in the St. Clair and Niagara Rivers! der the circumstances. at a cost of $3,400,000. The board also Gerald H. Hoag, manager of th Ma- said that the effect of the authorized jestic, declared yesterday afternoon diversion on the levels of the St. Law-that as far as he was concerned, he k rence River at and below Montreal w 'wiling togie fr sscor d I can be restored by dredging and ac- dents in Hilll auditorium following I cessory work, at an estimated cost of g $4,608,000. the winning of Conference champion slims oron therspecal ccasons t c l . I r s 3 1 r a C. 1 a x I i li 1 CABOT WILL TALK ON MEDICAL CODE ships or on other special occasions, provided the Butterfield management would authorize such action.He sug- gested the plan of preparing for the performance in advance with the un- derstanding that the show would he Oratorical Association, When Founded About 38 Years Ago, Had Definite Aim Of Arousing Student Interest In, Debating Editor's Note: This is the twelfth of alt series of articles by Daily staff members on the campus in forensic work. Local various campus institutions and organizations, s in extemporaneous and ora- published in an effort to make clear their tcot tSd functions and their particular features of in- torical speeches were inaugurated. terest to prospective participants. Exteporaneos contest arheld A 89,Tho both semesters for students eligible About 38 years ago, in 1889, homas for activities, but who have not yet C. Trueblood, professor emeritus of taken part in public speaking compe- public speaking, felt the need for an tition. The University Oratorical Con- administrative forensic society upon I test, The Atkinson Contest, The Black the campus with the purpose of New Testament Contest, and the Na- stimulating intercollegiate debates. tional Intercollegiate Contest on the Constitution compose the oratorical And thus was founded the Oratori- events sponsored by this organization. cal Association with its prime aim The University Oratorical Contest, the Horace Mann, Wendell Phillips, Henry Ward Beecher, Winston Spencer Churchlil, and Presidents Harrison, McKinley, Cleveland, and Wilson. SIHowever, this association was dis- continued in 1912 and the Oratorical - Association deemed it advisable to continue to supply the campus withl ! lectures. In the short period that the Asso- ciation has been bringing lectures to the campus many prominent men have ;appeared in An 'Arbor. Amon the list are Tagore, the famous Indian poet, and Senator Borah. A consider- able number of explorers have ap- peared in Hill auditorium under the + auspices of the Association. The Eg- yptian explorer Weigel, in the opinion of Prof. R. D. T. -Hollister, Dean Hugh Cabot of the Medical i free provided ri chigan won, thus of- School will deliver his annual ad- fering a special inducement to the dress before all those interested in 1 students. He explained that a free taking up medicine as a profession at.1 show last Monday night was impos- 4:10 o'clock today in Natural Science ! sible, as the performance must be ar- auditorium. This will be made at the rIed in adv ance ut by request of Dean John Effinger of the the Butterfield officials. literary college. The condition ofHenryBlakely '27; The address will deal with the re- wh njured b y taegas bomb quirements for a successful career wonwasnred byte ga vbom in the field of medicine, and in i sity hosptal last night as unchanged. Dean Cabot will set forth the various Dr. Albert; C. Kerlikowski, chief resi- obligations which are encountered in;; dent physician, said that hospital the profession, as well as its better authysieve sat the ste known features. The purpose of the w ibe peaenty tie ut talk will be to encourage all those will be permanently disfigured, but who are best fitted for being physi- his eyesight will be unimpaired. clans, and to discourage all those who The one student who was arrested have illusions concerning such a ca- following the disturbances was re- reer. The subject has been announc- leased yesterday after being asked to ed as "Medicine as a Profession." I report to headquarters on the charge - ;of resisting an officer. There will be INDIANA DEFEATS prosecution, according to Chief INDINA EFEAS :O'Brien. OHIO STATE, 36-31 The formal resolution prepared by s____President Little and signed by Dean (By Associated Press) Bursley a'nd Police Commissioners COLUMBUS, March 9. - Indiana Devine, Arnet and Kyer, will be given COUBS ac .- Idan I T mD~lV n,, f ;, t~~nxrnnri i r of encouraging the interest of the stu- dent body in debates with neighboring colleges. Informal shows were presented by the Association for the raising of senior trials for which will be held this afternoon, leads to the Northern Oratorical League Contests. The At- kinsoz Contest is based on the gene- ral topic of Christ's ideals for the