fi FETABLISHED 1890, Ig ttr vat*1 MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS Vol. XXXIX, No. 180 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, JUNE 1, 1929 PRICE FIVE CENTS MIUH G PLANS FIISHE F[N IISHD:OR CONCLUDING CLASSF;UNCTIONS Graduation Program Is Listed For Three Day ]Period CLASS DAY DATE CHANGED Dr. Clarence C. Little To Address Seniors Sunday Plans for the final class f one- tions of the present group of se- niors are now complete, reports from committees indicate. Class Day, Alumni Day, Baccalaureate ceremonies, and Comencement will' all occur in the three day period, Junie 15-17. The date for Class ]Day has becn changed to Saturday, June 15, in- stead of Friday, as was previously announced. The change has been effected, according to Robert Gess- ner, '29, chairman of the Class Day committee, in order that more par- ents of Seniors may be on hand for the exercises. Seniors will meet on the campus, and go through thce traditional ceremony in the open air. A-N Fate Anrn After an b direction of ant dean of raid Wedne Alpha Sigm the Senatet Affairs met and adopted compel thef main closed fer social pr 1929-30. At the tim ident of the and formall tion of the responsibility liquor in the against him ed, and he $1,500 bond, T O MEET UHnIO STATE FOR TITLE TODAY of Recently Raided House ouncedby Senate Committee nvestigation under the Fred B. Wahr, assist- f students, following a sday morning on the a Phi fraternity house Committee on Student yesterday afternoon d a resolution that will fraternity house to re- all summer and suf- obation during the year ne of the raid the pres- e house wasarrested ly charged with viola- prohibition law. The y for the presence of ie house was not held personally, it was stat- was released under a with examination set received over the phone that a keg of beer had been delivered to the house Tuesday night. The identity of the informant has not as yet been discovered. Following is the resolution of the Senate Committee: "Moved, that the Alpha Sigma Phi fraternity be closed from Saturday, June 1, 1929, until the opening of the fall se- mester, 1929, and further that the fraternity be placed on social pro- bation for the year 1929-30. "This action was taken at a meeting of the SenateaCommittee of Student Affairs held May 31, and followed the action taken by lo- cal officials in.raiding thehouse on Wednesday morning. "Evidence brought out during the investigation regarding individual BALDWIN OUSTED AS LABOR PARTY WINS ELECTIONSI McAfee Slated For Ohio Game Dismissal Of Preser Government Comes As Surprise FAIL TO GET MAJORIT nt 11 TY Coalition Of P a r t i e s May Force New Election Alumni Day Saturday Saturday will be termed "Alumni Day." It has been officially set as the date when old graduates will return to the campus to renew old memories and become acquainted with seniors of this year's class. President Clarence Cook Little will deliver his final Baccalaureate address here on Sunday morning, June 16, in Hill auditorium. If tbe day is clear, classes will assemble on the campus at 10:15 o'clock, in the same places as those in which they will assemble for Commence-{ mnent exercises, as announced in; Wednesday's Daily and on campus. bulletin boards. The weather being rainy, the graduates will p;oceed directly to Hill auditorium at 10:30 o'clock, instead of assembling at their respective places. Millikan Will Speak Dr. Robert Andrews Millikan will deliver the Commencement oration, it was announced yesterday by Dr Frank E. Robbins. Dr. Millikan, who was awarded the Nobel p-ize inj 1923 for his work' in isolating andl measuring electrons, is at present' director of the Norman Bridge lab- oratory of physics and chairman of the administrative council of the California Institute of Technology, at Pasadena. Many college degrees are aniong1 the hoiors held by Dr. Millikan. He was awarded his A. B. at Ober- lin in 1891 and received a degree of A. M. in 1893 from the same institution. He received the degree of Ph. D. from Columbia in 1895. He has been granted the degree of, Sc. D. by Oberlin in 1911, North-' wester n in 1913, Pennsylvania in 1915, Columbia in 1917, Amherst in 1917, Dublin in 1919, and Yale in 1925. The University of Californiaj bestowed the degree of LL. D. upon' his shoulders in 1924. Coif To Hold Banquet Tni htAt L Club for June 5. participants will be taken before Wednesday's raid was instigated the University Discipline Commit- LONDON, May .-The Labor by police subsequent to information tee for action." party tonight, with a counting of the votes of the general election all but completed, and is just short of an absolute majority in the House1 of Commons. The most' impressive showing of its young life had given I it a plurality over the old-establish- .1H r ed conservative party of 38 seats, hi OT EVERealthough the popular vote for the b Conservatives was about 200,0001f greater.- I a Other Chairmen To Be English Sovereign Is ed had won 288 seats while 8,506,224 Announced Early Again Confined To cs for Conservative canIc Announed Eary . had.elected 250.. Since therear Next Fall His Bed 615 members of the house, a clear ______ majority would require 308 seats. TENTATIVE PLAIS MADE CONDITION NOT SERIOUS Baldwin Badly Defeated The government of Prime Miis- :" (1y Associated ss ter Stanley Baldwin, which had' Final conferences of the various LONDON, May 31.-Anxious fear the overwhelming majority of 185 persons connected with the active gripped British hearts today at the in the dissolved Parliament, stood I news that King George was ill definitely defeated. The Liberall Opera were held yesterday to make again. The beloved sovereign, after party, the second veteran of British plans for the carrying on of the a month's convalescence from his politics, was led by David Lloyd f work during the summer. The final dangerous illness of the winter, was George to increased representa- ; revision of the book as well as ar- abed at Windsor castle with a fe- tions which seemed to give them a a rangement of a number of musical verish attac.valuable balance of power, al- offerings that have already been Lorc Dawson of Penn, one of the1 thougb they ran a poor ,thirdL. The ingprouctiosw bcpe inclue ofin physicians whose treatment through victory of Labor was the more in- ing productions will be included in long months last winter pulled King pressive because it had been aja Appointment of William C. Gen- George from death's grip, was I steady growth since It won the first t Ary,'31,a chaia of publicy called back by airplane from a trip two seats in 1900 by a vote of 62,- T try, '31, as. chairman of publicity on N otnn.Atog tws00 for the show was' announced by onThe contnet.Athugyi.as,~I Robert W: Mans '30.aGentry, who said this indicated no particular The country faces several alter-w isberniht editor of TIheny, wil urgency, it served greatly to aug- natives. Mr. Baldwin might try to a is a, ngheoroly, wi ent public anxiety. fight it out with the present gov- sublicityrce onrg, for h The physician, after landing at ernment, even without aid of the i was publicity director for "Ran- Iroydon from Paris, hurried by an- Conservative members who fell by b hewillEnd ha ful chaofirec- tomobile to his royal patient, and the wayside in the voting. A a he will:have full charge of direct- hryt bkcoalition between either Conserva- u ing the ways and means of pro- shortly let it be known his majesye tives and Liberals or Labors and P moigte12 hwntol nhas been confined to his room since t oigte 19so ntol niven Liberals itbformeLabor and In Ann Arbor, but also in the 13 or Sunday, although first word to the Liberals mig.t be formed, or, and n more other cities in which the of his fresh indisposition came only it looms large, a deadlock may H opera force a new general election before w oeaplays each year. Thursday. Other committee chairmen as His official announcement said next autumn. t well as the personnel of the various that King George had had a "fe- h ion Women Voters committees constituting the pro- vi attac kand w cnfinedto The electorate with about 5,000,- ducionstaf fr he per wil b Ihis bed. A feverish cold :marked the 000 women voters added, has caused : nunced early in the fall accrd beginning of the serious pulmonary asurprise by dismising the Bald- ing to Manss illness which began last November. w govnmen w Style experts will make sketches It was believed the ruler caught force for nearly five years andI Suggexngpterwidmeskrcos-cold last Sunday when he joined creating the possibility of the see- s fnextdperardurin the celebration of Queen Mary's and Balor government the country ; fall al - birthday anniversary by taking tea has known.n the summer. Next a sug in the open near Windsor at Frog- .If,as seems likely, the King in-V gestions will be given consderation . vites Ramsey Macdonald to form a n by E. Mortimer Shuter, director, more. government that will be able to ac- and choices will be made. cept the task with much greaterit Stanford Qualifies confidence than he did in 1924 - Hundred Are Dead 14 In Track Contest ; when with only 190 members he o .~"..- {. ..:.... . for thon-: William McAf cc Michigan pitching star who will ourl for the Wolverines in their rttle with Ohio State for the con-' erence title at 4:05 o'clock this fternoon. NLANDER STAFF POSITIONS MADE ive New Members Are Added To Lower Staff; Manag'ing Edi- tor Not Named With the final issue disposed of PLAY WILL RUN A Mystery-Thriller Will Be Newest Pro- duction "NIGHTSTICK" CONCLUDED As the last of the repertory offer- ings, the stock company which has been playing at the Mendelssohn theatre will present a mystery th; iller, "The Spider," beginning Monday night and running through Saturday night. Matinee perform- ances wil be given Wednesday and Saturday. The play opens with a series of .vaudeville acts and with the advent of the third or fourth performance, Mons. Chatrand, played by Ramon Greenleaf, and his mind reading act the mystery begins. It is while the lowly Minnesota team on June. Should Ohio State upset Michigan hopes today, Wisconsin would be favored for the title with the advantage of one more contest. Iowa also still possesses a slim chance for first honors. The Hawk- eyes have registered six victories in nine starts and are now resting in thlir d place. If Michigan and Wis- consin both lose their remaining games and Iowa defeats Indiana in ius concluding contest today, the Hawks will win the Conference title. Bill McAfee is expected to occupy the pitching box against Ohio State this afternoon. Although he lost his last start to Wisconsin at Mad- ison by a 4-2 score on Monday, he has undoubtedly beenfited from the rest he has been given this week and should he in good form to re- pel the invaders. McAfee has reg- istered victories over Illinois, Pur- due, and Iowa this season, losing only to the Badgers. Win Will Assure Baseball Crown IFor Wolverines By Edward J. Warner Only Ohio State's in-and-out baseball team remains between Michigan's nine and its second straight Conference championship as the rivals conclude the- 1929 diamond season at 4:05 o'clock this afternoon on Ferry field. Thursday's victory over Wisconsin put the Wolverines back in first place, a position which they will be fighting to retain in today's contest. If Michigan defeats the invading Buckeyes today, the race for the title will be definitely decided, but a loss will considerably complicate matters. Wisconsin now occupies second place with seven victories and three defeats, but the Badgers have yet to meet orthe current scholastic year, the taff of the Inlander magazine has nnounced appointments to next eason's publications. Five nevY cm bers will appear on the roste: t the first issue of the magazinC he date of which is undecided, 'hey are Edna Henley, '32, Eliza- 'eth Serhard, '31, Merle Ells. vorth, '30, Frances Sackett, '30 .nd Harold Courtlander, '31. With the exception of graduat ng members, the upper staff wil c kept intact, although no man ging editor has been named. Th 'pper staff editors for 1929-30 ar 'aul L. Adams, '30, Frances Jen nings, 31, Jean A. Gilman, '30, an lildegarde Scheuren, '30, all o shom have taken active part in his year's issues. Dean Bates To Speak At Missouri Exercise Henry M. Bates, dean of the Lau chool, will give the Commence nent address at the University o Missouri, Columbia, Mo., on Wed nesday, June 5. Dean Bates wi Peak on "Self-Government an he Individual." I- DAILY SUSPENDS PUBLICA- TION With this issue The Daily sus- pends publication for the school year. A Commencement extra will be published on Monday, June 17, and the regular sum- iuer edition will be started on Tuesday, June 25. :t ,V 3' , the mind 'reader and the hypnotist Ohio Has Little Success is working in the aisle of the thea- Kermode, a veteran moundsman, -1tre with his blindfolded medium 1 facing the audience that a murder will probably face the Wolverines -, is committed. Everyone sees the today. Ohio State has experienced e act, but no one can explain the ! only mediocre success on the. dia- e happenings. Three acts follow be- mond this season. The Buckeyes - fore the identity of "The Spider" are now tied with Indiana for fifth d is learned.d I f Alexander, the magician's helper, place in the standings, an 8-3 vic- n will be played by Robert Henderson. tory over Chicago last Tuesday ele- Suzanne Freeman will take the part vating them to that position. They of Beverly Lane, the young lady have won four out of nine games. whose escort is the recipient of the+ fatal bullet. Hess and Hinchman, outfielders, Two more p e r f o r m a n r e s of Widdifield, catcher, and Riehl, "Nightstick" will be given this shortstop, are among the veterans afternoon and tonight. Tickets for on the Buckeye team. w the production are still obtainable I - at thenbox office'of the Mendelssohn Michigan To Lose Five A theatre, and seats may be reserved Today's contest will mark the - I for any performance next week of completion of Conference competi- d"The Spider." tion for five Michigan players. Captain Corriden, Kubicek, Wein- Inai guration Dinner traub, Nebelung, and McCoy will o To Be Held By S. C. A. Iwind up their Big Ten careers j against Ohio. Although not epo Inaugurating two recently elect- pected to start in today's game, As- I ed officers, the Student Christian beck and Reichman are also num- I association will hold a banquet Sat- bered among the graduating Wol- urday noon at their new offices in verines. the Michigan Union. Besides these Coach Ray Fisher will use the jmen, John Webster and Laverne same lineup against Ohio State I Taylor, president ahd vice president that defeated Wisconsin, with the l respectively, the new cabinet will, exception of Asbeck. Harry. East- o be installed. man has performed capably at shortstop and wifl agal q geezl t1 thatposition. ~ ORSINVE TOR Twomore non-Conference games As Forests Burn fried a minority government PHILADELPHIA, May 31.-Stan- against Conservative opposition of, (By Associated Press) 'ford University's brawny band ofI 258 and depended for existence up-, TOKIO, May 31-Japanese resi- athletes, coached by Dick Temple- I on the whims of 158 Liberals.' dents of southern Saghalien island t ton, dominated the qualifying fought today for their lives and trials of the Inercollegiate A. A. A.1 Definite Action Due j their homes against forest fires A. track and fleld championships O Co h Prble which were believed to have killed today. ______ 100 persons and burned more than By capturing 14 places in the' 1,000 houses. 1 preliminaries, thus demonstrated With the announceient of a "parse dispatches to newspa- that there was no ballyhoo about ieeting of the Board in Control of pers were led to fear there had the advance notices of their prow- thltc this morning to coder been a major disaster. j ei . the Wieman dismissal case, definite action on the present muddled A~~~~~~~~ ~~~~ lA'A ovrn oobl ocigs a { +I '. it ! I 'I I LEGISLATURE HO Wovrie got l caching sita ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION MANAGER tion is expected today. Order of the Coif will hold its an- Professor Frayer, a member oft nual banquet at the Lawyers' club ANNOUNCES TICKET SALE PLANS the board, made the following at 6:45 o'clock tonight. The menu- _______n_____Iatementnyesterday, "No official bers of the senior law class recently Students will be limited to one f be accepted after that date without r has be ade by te -the student preference privilege. Boardi Control of Athletics as to., initiated into the order will be espe~ extra ticket apiece for the Ohio Tickets rere rthe status of Mr. Wieman For ob cially honored at this time.,xr pe ikt for the remainder of the v~u esnntigcnb ad ialy hord thitmeState and Harvard games and three gaies on the Wolverines' home reasons, nothing can be said Paul B. Bainger, '4 of the firm for the Iowa tilt next fall, accord- schedule will be obtained in the officially prior to a eeting of the of Jackson, Fuller, Nash and Bro- usual mannler on student applica- Board. Suchi a meeting will be held phy, of Nw York, has been ob- ng to an announcement by HarryLisuaiven out during registration. Saturday morning, June 1." tahed as the principal speaker. C. Tillotson, business manager of girA statement of the Board's decl . In order to prevent mistakes, ac- sion on the case and of the lns Among the more prominent of the Athletic Association. With the knowledgmnent cards wil be sent to son the case, and ofchepns the speakers at preceding Coif ban same plan of ticket distribution as students on receipt of applications, I for the 1929 football coaching staff, netsare orme Secetar of ar (is expected to be made following quets are former Secretary of War used last year in effect, the cheer- each card acknowledging the re- B Newton D. Baker, Justice Burch of ing section will again provide lodg- I ceipt of an application for tickets __Bad _cneene_ the Kansas Supreme court, and ing for those who stiH believe in for certain games. Justice Rosenberry of the Supreme seeing football games from the side Provision has again been made . rg re tb er ar court of Wisconsin. of the stadium. for a cheering section of 1200 seats . The members of the senior law Due to the late date for begin- in the middle of the west stand. class who have been elected to ning of classes, student coupons All seats in this section will be be- I i OF WORLD'S FIRST TYPEWRITER Hlonori na son of Michigan 'who "reported,"centrs more in the port- ihas remained unknwn for 'a ce" - able inodel s~he has in her room tury, the state legislature recently than in the first model ever madel approved a resolution reading in "The typegrapher," says the 'Na- part: "The Michigan Historical ! tional Cyclopedia of American bi- cornmission is hereby authorized to ography, "was so far in advance of collaborate with the University of the times that it found little mar- Michigan officials in securing and ket and its inventor turned to other! yet remaineoan the Michigan 1929 schedule. Michigan State will come to Ann Arbor for a Commencement week series of two games on June 14 and 15. The Spartans scored a 10 inning 4-2 victory over Michi- gan several weeks ago. 1 r maintaining for purposes of in- struction, the various instruments and other material used and asso- elated with the Honorable William A. Burt, during his work in the state." Burt is best known for the fact that he invented the world's first typewriter-or to be more accur- ate, a machine called a "type- grapher" which was the predeces- ior of the modern typewriter. He things." Those "other thinfgs" were activ- I ities that played a prominent part in the history of-Michigan and of Macomb county for' that period, as as well of other states. The pres- ent site of Chicago, then known as, Fort Dearborn and Milwaukee were laid out with the aid of a "solar comu, ss," anotheri hvention of Burt's, which placed dependence I on the sun and fixed stars rather| U. S. Tennis Team Vanquishes Cubans (Special Td The Daily) D-TROIT, May 31.--United States earned the right to meet the winner of the European zone matches in the Davis Cup compe- tition when John Van Ryn and Wilmer Allison scored an easy 6-2, 6-1, 6-0 doubles victory over Mo- rales and Upmann of the Cuban team today on t courts of the Detroit Tennis club. With yester-