ESTABLISHED i890 iY e Ar t r all 1 MEMBER ASSOCIATED Vol. XXXIX, No. 177. ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, MAY 28, 1929 No. 177 WIE AN F LILE MAINTAINS Y Act ACTION OF SPORT gra not suc Failure Of Immediate ran Expulsion Thought stal Mistake rep MONEY CONTROLS DECISIONci Situation Rests aQuiet At Iowa; Official sity Begins Query viol sub Characterizing the action of the A Big Ten faculty committee on in- this tercollegiate athltics in ousting anc Iowa from the Conference as un- whi duly secretive and ineffective, Con President Clarence Cook Little yes- lati terday issued the ensuing state- not ment, based, it was asserted, upon fere the truth of these following reports: tha (1) that the conference found one pell of its members guilty of infringe- P ment of its rules on remuneration the of athletics; (2) that the conference acc refuses to make public the details of t at this time; and (3) that the con- cha ference breaks off relations with the I suP] institution in question as of Janu- jct ary 1, 1930. a g President Little's Text hea foui The text of President Little's tua statement is as follows:tP "If these are the true conditions, a b one must without the details before affa him agree that the action has been enc taken in good faith. In my per- the sonal opinion, however, it is an er- soo ror not to have made the details bas public at this time. To fail to do cus so, giye opportunity for misunder- bee Standing, uncertainty, misinterpre- S'rlot, tumor and counter charges of various sorts. These have already. begun," "One may, however, have definite opinions as to the choice of Janu- ary 1, 1930, as the date of effective- ness of the action taken. This is in my opinion a great mistake. If the evidence was not sufficient to justify immediate action, the de- I cision should not have been Re reached. If it was sufficient, it is' certain that there are more men now in the accused institution who are worthy of suspension from con- ference competition than therewill D be next autumn. It is also likely by t that there will be more of them in ulty college at the start of any semester prof than there will be at any other tor time during that semester." - acti Whole Thing May Be Bluff invo "The institution convicted of in- chili fringement of rules is to be allowed opei to complete a baseball season and the to play a full season of football the while under a definite ban. This will breed ill feeling and is ethic- B ally weak and wrong. Of course the wor football schedules are made out and ad' the gate receipts from football pay pub for al loher sports. The impli- Iduri cation of the conference action is.und that that august body either desires cilI the gate receipts and conveniences Dr. of the games with the convicted pro institution or the whole is a bluff to in t be reversed before January 1, 1930, cati or both."1OUs prol (Oy Associated Press)A CHICAGO, May 27.-The Big A Ten conference athletic eruption, edf occasioned by the expulsion of Iowasofa , , r .__ DENIES REPORT OF RESIGNA rayer Justifies ost Mentions I ion Does Not Mean That Iow Is Out Of Big Ten Conference It may be taken absolutely fo nted that the Conference woul make so serious a decision i h action had not been fully war ted by the evidence presented, ted Prof. William A. Frayer o history department, Michigan' resentative onethe faculty coun of the Big Ten, last night, i ifying the Conference's decisio last Saturday night to seve letic relations with the Univer of Iowa on Jan. 1. 1930, fo ation of the rule prohibiting th sidizing of athletes. ccording to Professor Frayer action was taken in accord e with a Conference rulin ch states that "Members of th ference shall sever athletic re ons with any member that doe conform in full to the Con nce rules," and does not mea t Iowa has been or will be ex- ed from the Conference. rofessor Frayer, in deploring storm which the Conference' eptance of the recommendation he faculty council has raised racterized much of the presen posed information as pure con- ure, saying "It is apparent tha reat deal is being said in th t of the moment which is no nded on knowledge of the ac- t situation." rofessor Frayer also expressed elief that the troubled state o irs which has kept the.. Confer- e aroused since publication o: faculty council's decision would n pass due to lack of reliabl es for the many random ac- ations and rumors which hav n circulated.. ~ACULTY_'MEMBER gents Announce New Director Of Child Development r. Willard C. Olson, appointed the Regents Friday to the fac- of the School of Education a essor' of Education and direc- in Child Development, has been vely engaged in research work lving the characteristics o dren and is at present a co- rating member of the staff o Institute of Child Welfare o University of Minnesota. Served InPublic Schoos efore completing his graduat k he served for a few years i inistrative positions in th lic schools of Minnesota, and ng 1926-1927 held a fellowship er the National Research Coun- Board in biological sciences Olson is a member of man essional and honorary societie he field of psychology and edu on and is the author of numer magazine articles on researc blems concerning these topics Refused Attractive Offers ccording to information receiv from the University of Minne *, Dr. Olson has recently re- d attractive offers from a num- of institutions and chose th versity of Michigan largely be se of the plans for the new mentary school which is soon tc built by the school of Educa- and in which provision will b de for research work in thosE ects with which Dr. Olson i cerned. Dr. Olson will repor duty at the opening of the Uni- ity next fall, and will devot greater part of his time nex r to the organization of plan research work in the new ele- ntary school. ?on ferenceAction;.Rea Announces owa's Accusations Lift of Auto Ban U - a Rules Of Conference Were Not [[After 5 o'clock Friday after- Violated By The University IiL Unoon, June 7, the automobile reg- Of Michigan! ulation will be lifted and University students permitted to drive cars at r " In replying to the accusations of their pleasure, it was announced d Glassgow, 1929 Iowa football cap- yesterday by W. B. Rea, assistant f tain, that the actions of Michigan I L to the Dean-of students. in regard to inducing athletes to Any active driving before that - come to Ann Arbor would not bear time, outside of that authorized by " close scrutiny, Coach Yost stated Great Ball Is Feature regular permits or special arrange- f latngtta hIniain ments with Mr. Rea, will be co- lade by he Ih a C taintimations Of Game For Both sidered a violation of'the regulationi tirely unfounded. T eams and will merit disciplinary action, - According to Phillip C. Pack, li___ e warned.f SPublicityDirector during theTfallME This lifting of the ban will not n of 1926, the period referred to n AFEE ALLW SIX HIT apply after Summer school begins r charges, the correspondence was of to students enrolled in the Sum- Sa very different nature than sug- Wet Condition Of Field mer Session, it was announced. -gested by Glassgow, and in no way So Such students may apply for sum- r could be construed as in violation Makes Slow Playing mer school driving permits at anyc e of the Conference rules.I#Inevitable time after June 10, but permits will The exchange of letters was not be granted until June 18. , initiated by Glassgow, who wrote IMADISONWis., May 27.-Mich- ' "We have set the date for the - to the publicity department asking,! igan's ball team was jolted out of lifting of the ban at an early a g for information about the Univer- first place in the conference race time as possible," Mr. Rea said yes- en e sity. The correspondence was thus M here today, when Wisconsin's heav y a - in accordance with the Conference hitters, behind Maury Farber onI arranged that students living in S ruling which forbids Big Ten mound, hit McAfee safely six times near-by towns may drive to home - schools from writing first to pros- including three triples and a dou- and back during the last week of a pective entrants. ble, to hand Michigan its second examinations. Had it been possi-r - After an exchange of letters, successive defeat, 4 to 2 ble to make similar conditions pre-r Glassgow, having decided to enter Although the Wolverines playedInail during the first examination 9 Michogan in the fall, asked if the errorless ball, and in five out of week, it would have been done. s publicity department could assist eight innings, no more than three him in finding employment. This Badgers faced McAfee, a triple hy INTERFRATERNITY was done, a positi Ann Ar- Evans in the secpnd, and a triple, COUNCIL TO MEET t bor lunch and a job tlistributing double and single in the seventh, ?__ - Dailies being obtained for him. The resulted in two Cardinal tallies inI Due to the fact that a quorum was t telegram to which Glassgow refer- each frame. Nebelung came home D not present at the last meeting of red in his statement was sent to as the result of his double in the the Intenfraternity council, another I his home only after he had failed third, and Corriden tripled in the meeting has been sucieded for - to appear to take oven his work at fifth, to stretch it into a circuit 4u15 o'clock this afternodn in room the start of the school year, ac- , on an error by Hall, tying the 302 of the Union. At this time many I cording to Pack. This interpreta- score. f tion of the correspondence frees important matters will come up be- - Michigan from any suspicioit of DIAMOND WAS RAINSOAKED fore the council for discussion, and F having violated a Conference rul- Ten Michigan men got on bases, it is urged that every fraternity' ing. as compared to eight for the Bad- have at least one representative e - _gers, but the diamond was in poor Prof. Phillip Bursly, of the Ro- -Dirvo condition because of intermittent manse languages department, who, e showers, and the slow base run- is in charge of Freshman week next Aning, combined with the fine work fall, will discuss his plans for hand- of Wisconsin infield, left seven ?'ling the freshmen and wil outline i Wolverines to die on base, and one the procedure for matters pertain-b to be caught in a double play. ing to rushing. Michigan scored its first mark- t er in the third frame, McAfee went LA out on an infield bingle, Farber to ! LMansfield, but Nebelung doubledC Lower Class Students ? to right field. Corriden went tot first and Nebelung to third on an 1 ComposeOneOf error by Knechtges. With Straub1 Committees at bat, Farber made a wild pitch, allowing Nebelung to cross the Activities of the Student Chris- plate, and Corriden to go to sec-o Iond. Straub went out, Ellerman, N tian association have been brought, o au went out, len C to a close this semester with the out an infield u e Ceremony Come As A otoanifedpop-up to Ellen- SrrieToA m announcement of the Cabinet by man.SurpriseToArmy d - John E. Webster, '30P, president of Corriden Hits Triple Of reporterst s the association. The following will In the fifth .McAfee flied out to' - k n 1-.hn thK.- A . ia ',-,1 I i l Ellerman and Nehblung was n t, (By Associated Press) I 1 [ION ASCOACH Contli'ct With Y.ost Rmred Breakup Cause With reports of E. E. "Tad" Wieman's resignation from the coaching staff last night, followed by denial of the stories by Coach Wieman, himself, the identity of the head coach for the Wolverine football team for next fall became highly uncertain. Wieman, head coach of the football squad and assistant director of ath- letics for the past two years, was reported in an Associated Press dispatch, based on an interview with a member of the Board in control of Athletics, as intending to resign to avoid conflict with Fielding H. Yost, director of athletics. In a statement to a Daily correspondent last night, Wieman definitely denied any intention on his part of severing connections with the coaching staff. When called about the stories and denial, Yost refused to comment upon the situation. Prof. William Frayer, chairman of the board, emphatically denied the report of Wieman's rsignation. Other members of the board when called denied the report or refused to comment. C ARE MADE VALID Decison Of Highest Court Given As When called by the Daily at his residence last night, Coach Elton E. Wieman strongly repu- diated rumors that he was about to resign his position as head coach of the Michigan football team. Coach Wieman, in deny- ing that there was any basis of truth in the stories which were circulated, stated "I have abso- lutely no intention of resigning from the University of Michi- gan coaching staff." ma e up ei L cauine : MV: arin moi, ' 30, Mark Andrews, '29, Joseph How- , I ell, '30, Kenneth Lloyd, '30, Or- mand Drake, '30ED, John Brumm, f '31, Leo Norville, '30,*Ernest Reif,' f '30, Harley Kline, '30, Fred Bau- schard, '30, Donald Koch, '30, Jarl Andeer, '29, Pierce Rosenberg, '30, e Howard Simon, '30, Charles Jose, ''30, Richard Cole, '30, Charles Bos-, well, '30, John Langen, '30, Stanton Todd, '30, and Donald Hall, '29BAd. In addition to the above mentioned, upper class cabinet, one composed entirely of freshmen and sopho-I y more will be appointed early next. _ fall. Webster stated. - - Chairmen Will Be Selected (ut at first by Farber, unassiste With two men out Carriden hit long triple to center field, a crossed the plate with the tyi run while Hall was kicking the b around in the field. Straub flI out to Knechtges. The WoN were unable to score after t fifth. Wisconsin won the game in t seventh. Mansfield singled short, and went to second on sacrifice bunt by Ellerman. M termeyer made the second o when he hit a long fly to Neb lung in center field. Evans do bled to left field, scoring Man field. Mattheusen tripled to rig ed. a ,nd ngl all ed es he he to a it- )ut e- U- is- rht today had boiled down to silence and watchful waiting by member schools.0 Iowa officials, professing to still being unenlightened as to specific{ causes of a disbarment, were pre- paring for an investigation and had invited Major John L. Griffith, Con- ference athletic commissioner, to aid them. Griffith was to leave forI Iowa City tonight. Reports of impending action against other member schools, with Northwestern, Ohio State, Wiscon- sin, Minnesota and Michigan men- tioned, remained unfounded. Major Griffith explained no action could be taken until the faculty commit- tee which penalized Iowa, meets again, and that no meeting of a) body has been called. Jowa Had Been. Warned While Iowa officials, students and alumnai were professing bewilder- f use ber Uni' cau elen be i tion mad subj con for vers the year Ifor men Chairmen of committees of the field, scoring Evans, but he died at following divisions, Freshmen Work,. third when Knechtges went out on Extension Department, Open Forum, an infield rap, McAfee to McCoy. _ and Foreign Work, and Inter- The box score: - College Assemblies, will be selected Michigan AB R H PO A E I from the aforementioned names. Nebelung, cf.,.. 4 1 2 3 0 0 - Probably the most important phase Corriden, If. ..... 3 1 1 2 0 01 - of work will be that of th Exten- Straub: rf........4 0 1 0 0 01 esion Department, whose duty it will Kubicek, sb. ..... 3 0 0 2 3 0 - be to send student speakers to ad- Weintraub, 3b. 4 0 0 0 3, 0 'dress different luncheon clubs, such I McCoy, lb.......4 0 0 11 '0 01 o as the Kiwanis and Rotary organ- Eastman, ss.....3 0 0 4 1 0 i zations, throughout the state; as, Truskowski, c .. 2 0 0 2 1 01 well as speak at high school mass 1 McAfee, p. ...... 3 0 0 0 3 0j s meetings, and to occupy pulpits. - - .-- -- I The committee on Freshmen Work Totals ...... 30 2 4 24 11 0 1 - will have charge of the Freshmen Wisconsin AB R H PO A E I e Rendezvous given annually at the Cusinier, If. ... 4 0 0 2 0 01 t University Fresh Air Camp for in- Hall, cf. ......... 4 0 1 3 0 1 s coming freshmen. It will also send Mansfield, lb. ... 4 1 1 7 0 0 two men to interview students in- H. Ellerman, 2b. . 1 0 0 7 2 0 vited to attend the Rendezvous. Mittermeyer, rf. . 3 1 0 1 0 0 - Evans, c........ 3 2 2 4 2 0I eolo ist Returni Matthuesen, 3b..x 0 1 0 1 0 'Gg gKnechtges, ss. ... 3 0 0 2 3 1 To Ann Arbor Today Farber, p. ;..... 3 0 1 1 1 1 Totals .........28 4 6 27 9 3 William S. Carlson of' the de- Two-base hits-Nebelung, Evans. , partment of geology at the Univer- Three base hits-Evans, Corriden, k1 sity. who has been assistant aero- Mattheusen. Farber. Double nlavs1 ENGLEWOOD,N. J., May 27.- Miss Anne Morrow, daughter of Ambassador and Mrs. Dwight W. Morrow and Col. Charles A. Lind- bergh were married at the bride's home this afternoon. The ceremony, witnessed by only the immediate family, was per- formed by the Rev. William Adams Brown of Union Theological Semi- nary, New York City. Immediately afterwards, Ambas- sador Morrew left for Washington. The honeymoon plans of the cou- ple were kept secret. The bride wore a simple white chiffon dress with short veil made for her by Miss Mary Smith, the family dressmaker for years. She wore no gloves, but carried a bouquet of blue larkspur plucked from the Morrow garden, just be- neath them drawing room window where the couple exchanged their vows. So far as could be learned there were no witnesses outside of the immediate Morrow family and pos- sibly a few of the household staff. Reporters Scooped Apparently decided upon on the spur of the moment, the ceremony took even the most intimate neigh- bors of. the Morow's by surprise and completely "scooped" the small army of reporters and news pho- tographers who for weeks have looked forward to depicting the ro- mantic event in great detail in print and picture. Col. Lindbergh and his fiancee went for a ride in the early after- noon and stopped for a brief visit at the home of a friend in Engle- wood. Shortly after their return, barely time for the bride to change her chic motor ensemble for the soft chiffon, the small wedding 1-arty atheed in the adraminL^ Ii Ii 1, Unanimous (By Associated Press) ANN ARBOR, Mich., May 27.-Tad (By Associated Press) Wieman, head football coach and WASHINGTON, May 27.-The assistant director of intercollegiate validity of pocket vetoes by the athletics at the University of Michi- president was upheld in a unan- gan, will not coach the football team imous decision handed down today next fall, according to a member of by the Supreme Court, regardless the Board of Control of Athletics at of whether the legislation in ques- the University, who requested that tion was sent to the White House his name be withheld from pulbica- in the closing days of a session tion. which was not the final session of a The board member told the Asso Congress. ciated Press that Wieman and the The court in an opinion sum- athletic director, Fielding H. Yost, marized by Justice Sanford, con- had reached a parting of the ways strued the word "adjournment" in and that reconciliation between the constitutional provision relat- hem was impossible. He declared ng to vetoes as meaning the end they were at swords' points. of any Congressional session as The break between Yost and Wie- well as of a Congress It held that man had its inception almost a year Congress, before ending a session, ago. Last summer, before the prac, must give the president the ten tice sessions started on September days granted him by the constitu- 15, Yost announced he would return tion to act on bills passed or else to active coaching. The night be- assume responsibility for the fail- fore the Ohio Wesleyan contest he ure of those on which it does not nnounced that Wieman was head act. .ootball coach once more. The case in which the decision Michigan lost the first four games, was rendered involved the Okano- -oing down to defeat before Ohio gan and other Indian tribes ir Nesleyan, Indiana, Ohio State, and Washington, which, had failed ir Nisconsin. Many alumni and stu- an effort to have the court of Itents rallied to Wieman's support, claims hold that a pocket veto had teclaring he had not been given not killed a bill relating to claims : Lull charge of the team in time to deld by them. levelop the green material. -Late in Added importance has been at- he season the Wolverines showed tached to it, however, in view of remarkable reversal of form, whip- other legislation which had been :ing Illinois, the Big Ten cham- ccoNded pocket vetoes, including pions, Iowa, and Michigan State he Norris resolution for govern- yollege, and tieing the Naval acad- maent operation of the Muscle Amy. Yost and Wieman gave out a Shoals project in Alabama. joint statement denying there had w been any break in their friendly re- WINNER OF TODD Cations. PRIZE ANNOUNCED Wiena had been Yost's protege .U and one of his closest friends since ,___and 1920, a star in any position Isaac Hoffman, '29, is the win- the days when Tad, in' 1916, 1917, ner of the A. M. Todd Prize for : and 1920, a star in any position 1929, according to an announce- from fullback to tackle, tore oppo- ment made yesterday by Professor nents' lines to shreds. Carter Goodrich of the Economics In 1927, Yost announced he had Department. retired from active coaching, and Hoffman, who is a member of appointed Wieman head football Phi Beta Kappa and of Alpha Kap- coach. Wieman was understood. to pa Delta, National Honorary So- be head coach till Yost announced ciological Society, took as his sub- last summer that he would take ject "A History of the Leadership part in coaching the 1928 team. Last of the British Coal Miners." The fall Wieman told a number of award of the Todd prize, which friends that he never was head carries with it a remuneration ofi coach from the start of the season one hundred dollars, was in charge and that he never knew the work of a committee composed of Pro-I in the field was up. to him. fessors Carter Goodrich, L. J. Carr, Yost said he had tried to put and C. F. Remer of the Lepart- across the idea that there was no ment of Economics and Sociology. head football coach at Michigan, Each member of the committee, and that every member of the according to Professor Goodrich, coaching staff shared equally in the arrived at the same decision inde- responsibilities. pendently without consultation. "The head coaching staff, as far as the actual work in the field is - 1concerned, has been up to Wieman 6 N t * a.' from the start," he declared. I Hunter Bats Danet In Tennis Singes (Y Associated Press) I PARIS, May 27.-Frank Hunter the only American of first rank 4, s it I ~ 11 F1M if1 T rg1 n,1ffWum W' n A's' I r