ESTABLISHED 1890. JrY *iiy MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS Vol. XXXIX,, Vol. 170 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, MAY 19, 1929 EIGHT PAGES SBEC i_ 1 ., S aRTH 13-0 Varsity WOLVERINES SHO Thinclads Drop Close Meet To Illinois W V. Veteran Twirler Holds Wildcat i UEP DTo Single Blow I BUTLS73 TO62 Closing Rush In Final Events Decides Supremacy POORMAN WINS SHOT PUT T lan Pull S urprise By Beating Timm In Dashes By George Taubeneck, Sports Editor The Daily Illini CHAMPAIGN, Ill., May 18.-An unexpectedly strong Michigan track team accompanied a driving rain- storm into the stadium this morh- ing, and the combination came un- _ comfortably close to putting a heavy wet blanket upon Illini as- Fred Asbeck pirations for an undefeated season who hurled his fifth consecutive in dual meets. A closing rush in victory against a Northwestern the .final events enabled Illinois to team yesterday, allowing one hit win, 73 to 62. and no runs. Tarbill Wins Low Hurdles Eddie Tolan did the expected by Winning both the 100 and 220 yard dashes, but his time in each event. considering the fact that they were I A Q E IN I running in the rain and over aI t ack which was inches deep in wa- LO ter, was unexpectedly fast.{ Pushed to the tape by Jud Timm, who is always a good mudder on either the- ,gridiron or the cinder Students Ma Attend path, Tolan copped the century in May 9.9 seconds. With a little less dif-) Appreciatory fculty the Negro flash ran away inner from Cave of Illnois in the 220 in 3 21.3 seconds. nh Inasmuch as it has been er- Handsome and debonair "Bud" roneously rumored that the all-stu- Poorman also listed up to advance dent, appreciatory banquet, which publicity by taking the shot put will be tendered President Clarence with a heave of 42 feet, 1 inch. Cook Kjttle and Mrs Little next Poorman was not at all extended Thursday night would be an to beat his teammate, Brooks, and invitational affair, tickets for all Burdick, Of Illinois, who took third. students wishing to attend may Wolves Get Slam in Discus be secured at the State street book- The big surprise of the day was stores tomorrow and Tuesday, it was furnished by Tarbill, Michigan announced last night by Chester C. hurdler, who edged out Jimmy Cave Bennett, '29, chairman of the ticket of Illinois in the 220 yard low hur- mncommittee. . diles in the remarkably fast time Numerous frateranties have ar- of 23.5 seconds, which equalled the ranged to attend the dinner en bloc, dual meet record, and independents may obtain their covers at the above named places. Summaries:1 The time of the dinner will be 6 100 yard dash.-Won by Tolan, o'clock, and will last only until 8 (Mich.); Time, (Ill), second; Cave, o'clock in order that the guests may; (Ill.), third. Time--:099. attend the May Festival concert Mile run.--Woh by Seldon, (Ill.); immediately following. Stine, (Ill.), second; Bunning, (I1.,1 It was learned last night that in third. Time-4:284. order to assure that the banquet be ?20 yard dash.-Won by Tolan, kept a strictly student affair, a re- (Mich.); Cave, (Ill.), second; Burk- quest from Ann Arbor business men hart, (Ill.), third Time-:21.3. for 100 covers was refused. Further, 120 yard high hurdles.-Won by the program as announced Friday Rodgers, (Ill.); Sentman, (Ill.), includes only student speakers, second; Trimble, (Ill.), third. Time aside from the response of Presi-, -:14.8 dent Little' himself. George F. Shot put.-Won by Poorman, Rich, '30L., will be toastnaster, and (Mich.); Brooks, (Mich.), second; j music will be furnished by Bob Car-' BuMdick, (Ill), third. Distance-42 son's band A surprise of an unex-E feet, 1 inch. pected nature, whose identity is 440 yard dash.---Won by Dalton being rigidly guarded, will come to Seymour (Mich.; Dale Seymour, light during the banquet, it was in-] (Mich..), second; Kelly, (Ill, third., timated by Thomas C. Winter, '30 Time-: d50. KIB.Ad., last night. Two mile run--Won by Abbott, - - (ill.); Austin, (Mich.), second; HOUSES ADJOURN ; Tockstein, (Ill.), third. Time-9:39. FOR GOLF LINKS (New dual meet record). G Discus throw.--Won by Sander- Farm Rn'ief And Tariff Laid Aside son, (Mich.) ;Brooks, (Mich.), sec- Until Monday; Congressmen ond; Carlson, (Mich), third. Dis- Take Afternoon Off tance-136 feet, 5% inches. eA ro f Pole vault.-Won by McDermot, (By Associated Press) (Ill.); Harper, (Ill.), second; Cash, WASHINGTON, May 18.--Con- (Ill.), third. Height-12 feet, 9 in. gress laid aside farm relief and 220 yard low hurdles.-Won by tariff today for baseball. Tarbill, (Mich.); Cave, (Ill.), sec- Both houses were in adjourn-1 ond; Sentman, (Ill.), third Time- ment but the Republican members :23.5.-(Ties meet record). of the House ways and means corn- High jump.-Hill, (Ill.), and Fel- mittee continued their efforts to ker, (Mich.), tied for first; Carr, i smooth the grievances among (Ill.), third. Height-5 feet, 9 3-8 members of their party from agri- inches. Icultural states. 880 yard run.-Won by White, The farm relief bill meanwhile (Ill.); Orlovich, (Ill.), second; Lo- had been given to a conference] Mont, (Mich.), third. Time-1:57.1.1 committee, which will hold its first Broad ,jump.-JWon by Simon, meeting Monday to attempt to (Ill.); Chapman, ,(Mich.), second; reconcile the differences between1 Roi in rm (7 1) + hir- Din tane. __-22, thn turn .n. s .p - -,r. ri SIX CONCIRTS WILL MAKE UP PROGRAM FOR MAYFESTIVAL "Samson And Delilah" To Be Presented On Saturday ZIMBALIST WILL APPEAR I .j S tudents Offered Pay IAs Undercover Agents Brown University Head Condemns Providence Administrator's Proposition, However (By Associated Tress) PROVIDENCE, R. I., , May 18.- By becoming an "undercover" agent and getting evidence. of ownership of prohibited alcoholic beverages any student of Brown University accepting the offer wvill be paid $5 a day, Deputy"Prolibi- tion Administrator John W. Morrill in this city announced today. President W. H. T. Fense of Drown, when informed of the of-1 fer, said: "I should prefer to .be the student here engaged in other and more uplifting callings in ob- taiing money for their college ex- 1penses." o I RAIN HALTS TENNIS MATCH J Rain caused the cancelling of 11 the tennis matches scheduled j I between Illinois and Michigan I which were to have been play- I I ed at Champaign yesterday afternoon. ECKENERIEXAMINES ZEPEI ENGINES FOR MOTOR DEFE11CT Breakdown Accidental According To Captain OWNER DENIES SABOTAGE After Being Repaired Graf Will Fly Back HomeI (Ry Asswiated Press) CUERS, France, May 18.---Dr. Hugo Eckener, after a day spent in careful examination of his crippledI ship the Graf Zeppelin left1 to- night for Friedrichshafen. He had! Wildcats H eld To Single Hit; SevenMen Fan PURPLE GET DANGEROUS ONLY ONCE, IN SECOND, WHEN SINGLE THREATENS RALLY EVANSTON, Ill., May 18.-Led by Giant Fred Asbeck, who limited the locals to a lone scratch single while the Wolves were feasting on the offerings of three Wildcat hurlers, Michigan easily swamped Northwestern here today, 13 to 0, thereby retaining ' unblemished record at the top of the Conference standings, with four victories in as many starts. Always a nemisis to the Wildcats, Asbeck today made no exception, turning in the most brilliant of his five wins over the Purple. Oliphant's scratch infield single to Weintraub, opening the second inning whose throw he barely beat by a step, prevented the Wo- verine veteran from attaining a position in baseball's hall of fame Two Matinee Programs Also To Feature Week's List - Opera stars, oatorio singers, and instrumentalists with conductors and directors supplemented by the Chicago Symphony orchestra, Uni- versity Choral Union and a large chorus of school children will as- semble their artistic assets for the annual May Festival which will take place May 22-25, inclusive. This event, which is the thirty- sixth annual occasion of its kind, will consist of six concerts each of which has been built in confo'mity to the ten concerts given earlier in the season in the Choral Union se-I ries, as well as a part of the Fes- tival as a whole. Two concerts stand out as artistic programs, that on Wednesday night i and that on Friday night. At the former concert, Sophie Braslau, contralto, and Richard Crooks, tenor, will be supported by Fred- rick Stock, conductor, and the or- chestra players. At the other artist concert on Friday night, Edith Ma- son, soprano, and a member of the Chicago Civic Opera company, will be heard for the first time in Ann Arbor. Barre Hill On Program Two afternoon concerts will be' provided, one on Friday and the other on Saturday. The Friday afternon concert will, as usual, uti- lize a large chorus of young people whao have been trained during the past year by Miss Juva Higbee. On the same program the Hungarian violinist, Efrem Zimbalist, will ap- pear- as soloist. This will be his first appearance with an orchestra. Barre Hill, another member of the Chicago Civic Opera company, and trained in the University School of Music, will also appear on this program. in a group df arias. hill has sung the past year with the Chicago association. Saturday afternoon F r e d r i c k Stock and his orchestra and Joseph Hofmann, the pianist, will provide the entertainment. Hofmann has for many yeais been at the pinacle of pianistic fame. Choral Union To Give Concert Two other concerts of widely dif- ferent types will be heard. On Thursday night the University Choral Union assisted by soloists with the Chicago Symphony or chestra uider the baton of Musical Director Earl V. Moore will present two choral works. Jeannette Vree land, oratorio singer, and Lawrence Tibbett, baritone of the Metropoli- tan Opera (company, will supply the solo parts. The final concert in the series Saturday night will assemble the Chicago orchestra, Choral Union, and a group of stars for a per- formance of "Samson and Delilah." Solo parts will be sung by Nevada Vandeveer, contralto who is tak- ing the place of Marion Telva, Paul Althouse, tenor of the Metro- 'olitan Opera house, Richard Bo- nelli, baritone of the Chicago Civic Opera company, and William Gus- tafson, basso of the Metropolitan Opera company. Comedy Club Takes Nine New Members Nine students 'interested in cam- pus dramatics were voted into, membership into Comedy Club at a recent meeting of that organiza- tion. Membership is not limited to anv n emholnrl new ommifrsi t i o-. made plans for putting the dirig- ible back into air service and had characterized as "absurd" reports that sabotage was responsible fgrl the breakdown of four of the five motors on Thursday. Eckener Surveys Craft RThe dirigible commander has left to his staff the task of installing new motors, expected from Fried- richshafen tomorrow or Monday.I Traditional Ceremony The airship is scheduled to leave! . early Monday or Tuesday morning Will Be Held for its home port where it will be Wednesday completely overhauled. The start -.,.. of the next attempt to fly to Amer- Unless yesterday's threat of rain ica has been tentatively set for t culminates in torremtial downpours June. Wednesday night, members of the - Before giving the craft into! class of 1929 in the various schools charge of others Dr. Eckener made and colleges of the University will i a long survey of all of its parts in at that time gather on the diagonal consultation with the zeppelin ex- X in front of the library to lift their pert Dimiling of Friedrichshafen., voices in song, according to Herbert Whether this examination threw Palmer, '29, chairman of the senior further light on the cause of the r sing committee. motor trouble was not made public, A stand has already been erected but Dr. Eckener was emphatic in opposite the diagonal door of the saying the breakdowns were nat-! library, to accommodate members ural and accidental. E of the Varsity band, who will be Thousands of automobiles poured ! on hand to furnish music, and the into this little aviation village to-' University Men's Glee club, which day, bringing French aviation ex-Y will lead in the singing. It is ex- perts as well as curious civilians to pected that Theodore Harrison, of visit the Graf Zeppelin in her1 the School of Music, will be avail- hangar. able to direct the mass singing. Spectators Are Numerous z The purpose of the annual Senior "No one is barred," ruled Dr.t sing, according to officials, is to Eckener. "I am so deeply appreci-. furnish graduating students an op- ative of the assistance and welcome1 portunity to gather for a final of the French at this untowardt happy time together, when freshly- ! landing that I can take no excep- I <;reeend lawns and newly-leaved tion to their seeing all they wantr trees make the campus more beau- of our craft.' tiful than it is at any other time Some of the passengers, far from t of the year. discouraged at their experience,' Besides the traditional Michigan1 announced they would not cancel1 ;:ongs, such as "Yellow and Blue," their booking and would fly with "Victors," "Varsity," and "College the Zeppelin if and when she Days," a number of other songs will started to America again. These be on the program, according toj sought hotel accommodations at Palmer. ~Toulon, content to sleep. TO OPENMONDAY Henderson Will Direct Plays At League Theatre' Opening for a three weeks' run at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre to- morrow night, a group of players directed by Robert Henderson, will present George Arliss' original pro duction, "The Green Goddess.""Five performances of this vehicle will be given, during the week along with four performances of George Ber- nard Shaw's "You Never Can Tell." The former production will be given Monday and Tuesday rights, Wednesday matinee and night, and Fi iday night. Shaw's comedy will be presented Thursday matinee and night , and Saturday matinee and night. Reynolds Evans, who appears here in "The Vikings," plays the role of the Raja of Rukh in the first production. The plot is about a party that is wrecked in an air- plane in the Kingdom of ttukh and the melodramatic theme is built aroundthe Raja's scheme of deal- ing with his visitors. The technical staff of the com- pany have constructed a huge idol to use in the scenes, and has em- ployed two native Hindus to assure the authenticity of the native lan- guage used in the play. William Archer, the author, con- ceived the idea for the plot in a dream and after attempting to get several playwrights to carry out the action for him, undertook the task himself. Archer spent most of his life in an attempt to elevate the theatre, and it is ironic that this one play should be his greatest success. 'Tickets for the performance may be secured by calling the box office of the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. T'ickets for the showings are priced at 50 cents for the matinees and 75 cents for the night perform- ances. Man And Woman Will Seek Endurance Mark Roosevelt Field, N. Y., May 18-- A man and a woman Friday an- nounced plans for separate at- tempts to better the world's refuel- ing endurance flight record by 150 hours, 40 minutes, and 15 seconds established in January by the Army plane Question Mark at Los Angeles Lieut. H. B. Clarke, former man- ager of Roosevelt Field, will com- mand one plane and the other will be in charge of Viola Gentry, for- mer holder of the solo endurance flight record for women. -with a no-hit, no-run performance. His feat was all the more credit- able considering the freezing cold weather and the strong wind which blew off the lake. Besides his work on the mound, Asbeck led the as- sault on the Wildcats, getting three singles and a walk in five trips to the plate. Michigan had no trouble in reach- ing each of the three opposing pitchers, and from the outset it ap- peared that the "giant killers" were in for a hard afternoon. The Wol- verines garnered fourteen hits for a total of twenty-two bases, while playing errorless ball behind their "Giant" hurler. Oliphant Gets Only Hit Northwestern's lone threat caime in the second inning when Ol- phant led off with the only hit the Wildcats could- gather. Kadison popped to McCoy but Schwartz walked. The men died on first and second however, when Carey whiffed and Heideman died, Asbeck to McCoy. Michigan started early, getting two runs in each of the first and second innings and four markers in the third. After one had been re- tired in the first, Corriden singled to left and scored on Straub's dou- ble over third. Straub scored when Schwartz threw wild to first on Weintraub's grounder, after Kubi- cek had been retired. One hit, an ' error, a sacrifice, and a man hit by pitcher gave the Wolverines two more runs in the second. Wolves Score Heavily Four runs, gathered in the third, put the game on ice for the Wolver- ines. Straub led off with A sing~le, Kubicek walked, and Weintraub beat out a bunt filling the bases. McCoy bounced to Schwartz and Straub was forced at thewate, on a similar play, Kubiceh was safe at home when Schwartz' throw was wide of the plate. Truskowski sin- gled to left, Weintraub and McCoy scoring, and Asbeck walked,again filling the bases. Heideman was replaced by Weil, a southpaw, who retired the side, with Olly Myron scoring after Rojan allowed the third strike on Nebeluxg to get BARKER EMPHASIZES DIFFERENCE BETWEEN NATURAL, POSITIVE LAW Enphasizing the vast difference necessity of a supreme legal power that existed between the British embodied in definite form. ThisI and colonial conceptions of law demaiid was met in 1787 by the for- a ulation of the constitution of thel during the latter part of the eigh-United States. From that time on teenth century, Prof. Ernest Barker your country cannot be said to base of Cambridge University explained its government on a system of na- one of the most important causes tural law. of the American revolution in a lec- Professor Barker concluded by ture, "American Ideas During the pointing out that though the ideal- Revolution," given yesterday morn- ism in a belief in man's natural ing in Angell hall. rights is commendable and inspir- "The English idea," he said "con- ing, nonetheless it is impractical sisted of a rigid adhorence to one and out of place in an organized law-positive law, which was made government. "It's whole trouble"' and regulated by parliament. Man's he said, "lies in the fact that there innate rights were to them things is no infallible source to which we metaphysical, not to be considered may turn for a definite statement in problems of government. Wholly of what constitutes these rights of contrary to this conception was the man by nature." continental belief in two laws- positive law and natural, i. e., the law of man's rights by nature." , urN eather4an I "It seems," he- continued "that American opinion was influenced - mainly by the continental ideal, and those beliefs furnished the colonies r with the necessary 'grounds in I. , breaking away from the mother country. 1 1 i ( I r C t s E i i away froi him. Box score: Michigan AB Nebelung, cf. .... 6 Corriden, lf. ......3 Straub, rf.......4 Kubicek, 2b. ..... 4 Weintraub, 3b. ... .6 McCoy, lb.......5 Myron, ss. ....... 4 Truskowski, c. ... 2 Asbeck, p.......4 Totals........38 Northwestern AB Jacobs, cf.......3 Waniata, 3b.... 3 Isard, 3b. 1 Rojan, c...... 4 McAleece, rf.,....3 Schuett, rf......1 Oliphant, lb.. 2 Kadison, 2b.... 3 Schwartz, ss. 2 Dempsey, ss... 0 R 0 1 2 2 2 3 3 0 0 13 R 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 H 0 1 2 1 2 2 2 1 3 14 u 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 PO A E 1 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 2 3 0 9 1 0 4 2 0 7 0 0 1 1 0 27 Po 1 2 1 7 0 0 11 4 1 0 7 A 0 0' 0 3 0 0 2 1 3 0 0 F 0 0 0 1 0 Q- 1 0 2 0 Badmo sC 'es Beat Chlream® I I F