, ST1 ALI ED Art I Air 4p. --A6. - tic t . MEMBER. ASSOCIATED PRESS VOL. xxxVII, No. 46. ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1927 EIGHT PAGES -- - - .-. ULy i A. A'X%,XJ:/ ju j &littt ltt s a saww w% #% d ^ .. 1 a1 Rr1'? .r,....-w - -. -- _. -1 WW WILL BROADCAST FOURTH AIR PROGRAM FROM STUDIO TONIGHT MEN R ESPONSIBLE FOR TRIAL ENDING TO FACE JURY 11XIN CHARGE IN DOME cAO GOVERNMENT CHARGES AGAINST CLARK TO BE HEARD ON J NOVEMBER 25 J CLERK MAKES DISCLOSURE , NIN E Y E ARS T ODAY SNCE MEMORABLE OESOHBSTO ARMISTICE OF '18 FIRTnvmo I H AS GIV EN 1,700 STUDENT LOANS FOOTBALL, AIINAND TOPCS NCMDEIN LAW WIEMAN TO DIVE ADDRESS Soloist And Tholins Will Constitute 3Itsleal Numbers For Evening In Place Of Orchestra e Four speakeirs and two soloists will be included on the fourth Michigan 1 Night radio program to be broadcast between 7 and $ o'clock tonight by direct wire connections with WWJ, thie Detroit News, from the University studio roo~m on the fourth floor of University hall. The program and an- nouncing, will again be in charge of } Waldo M. Abbott, of the rhetoric de- partment. Football, aviation and law topics will be the center of interest on to- night's broadcas , according to An- nouncer Abbot.1o lton E. "Tad" Wie- man, successor Fielding H. Yost, { director of intercollegiate athletics, as I head coach of the Varsity football squad, will give one of the two talks on football, his talk being addressed to the "Stadium crowd," it being the night before the intersectional tilt with the United States Navy. Coach Wieman will discuss the different players who are to get into the game Saturday'. Tillotson Will 'Tals. Harry Tillotson, business manager of the athletic association, who has charge of the distribution of football , tickets for all home games, will ex- plain the method of distribution, show- Will Probably Answer To Charwes Self Incrimination For Re- fusal To Testify Of (By Associated Press) WASHINGTON, Nov, 10.--A charge of criminal conspiracy to influence the verdict of the Fall-Sinclair Teapot Dome trial jury was laid today against another of Harry F. Sinclair's asso- ciates, Sheldon Clark, wealthy Chi- cago snorts and oil man. Following in the footsteps of Henry Mason Day, vice-president of the Sin- clair Exploration company, Clark stood upon the ground of possible self incrimination in refusing to testi- fy in the grand jury investigation of the oil jury scandal. i $10,000 Bond Required Like Day, he was hustled from the grand jury room across the street to the office of United States Commis- sioner Needham C. Turnage, where the complaint was made and a bail bond of $10,000 required and furn- ished-. Clark was suave and smiling when he went into the grand jury room for the second time shortly after noon. He was red of face when he came out a few minutes later, and his apparent nervousness increased during the pro-~f ceedings before the commissioner. An immediate hearing was demand~- ed by Clark, but Neil Burkinshaw, as- sistant district attorney in charge of morrow, Central time, since the stri- etebarking ofete godsralnthe time after -four years of destruction and .slaughter. An emotional outburst of thanks- giving that the struggle was over swept the world on that day. Then the vexing business of rebuilding amongst economic and physica, wreckage left by the World war be= gan. As in the past, since that first wild outburst of relief that the fighting had ended on the original Armistice day, there will be no formal celebration in America of this ninth anniversary. Today however, a new touch will Ibe given the day so far as Washington is concerned with the unveiling at Ar- lington of the Cross of Sacrifice erected there by the government of Canada to the memory of Americans who fell in the ranks of Canada's fighting legion during the war. Describes War As "The Red Laugh" And A 21ajior Issue Before The World T'oday REFERS ,TO FUTURE WARS Describing war as "The red laugh,'' Rev. Frank Hartley declared it was one of the major issues before the wld tnrln in th Tnl tn lonri In EXPEDITION TO ARCTIC LEADERS OF TW0 EXPLORATIO NS SPENDS SEVERAL f10NTHS STUDYEN G STORMS BANCSTEAD PARTY SAFE Remainder of Group Stays In Green. land Throughout Winter Vor Ite-. search In Meteorological Work Prof. William H. Hobbs, head ofj the geology department and leader of two meteorological expeditions to j Greenland, will return to Ann Arbor this morning, a ,cording to a telegram received this week. Professor Hobbs returned to this country aboard the Leviathan which docked in Now Yrork f Tuesday, having been idelayed one 3 clay by severe storms over the Atlan- tic. Professor Hobbs stopped on route to Ann Arbor at the Eastman-Kodal laboratories in Rochester where the films exposed by this year's expedi- tion are being developed, leaving there last night for Ann Arbor. Left In May Professor Hobbs has been gone since the middle of May on an ex- pedition to prove a theory he holds 1on the origin of North Atlantic storms' over the great Greenland ice-cap. Professor Hobbs joined the rest of the party, who had preceded him by a week, at Copenhagen, and they all arrived at Holstenborg, Greenland, I on June 15, reaching their ultimate goal, Camp Lloyd, at the head of Kangendlugssdak fjord on July 2.1 Professor Hobbs and Ralph L. Belk-1 nap, other faculty member of the ex- i pedition. left Camp Lloyd during the AUDITORIUMTONilT' TO STIITIATE F11:UTING SP'lifrT I\ STI'DENTS IIN ETE OF RICH, KIPKE WILL SPEAK Address, Cheers, Songs. and ; oflon I Pictures Coinpose Program For Tonight's Assembly To make reparation for the 10-0 (le- feat which the Navy adinistered to Michigan's football team last year, and to stimulate a fighting spirit in the students which will tend 4oward the realization of the motto "Sink the Navy" the student body will a ,s nmblc in a pep meeting at 7:30 o'clork to- night in Hill Auditorium. A program of speeches, yells, sring, and movies has been prepared bjy the committee in charge, under the direc- tion of Fred Asbeck, '29. As a special added attraction, Earl V. Moore nof the School of Music will lead the singing with slides of all Michigan song, a