ESTABLISHED 1890 j g it viiA MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS Vol. XXXVIX, No. 3. ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1928 TEN PAGES TWO SPEAKERS SELECTED FOR z CONVOCTIONSA WILLIAM L. PHELPS OPENS FALL SERIES ON NOV. 18TH; H. P. VANDUSEN TO SPEAKj Effort Being Made By Committee Tb Secure Services Of Other speakers Two speakers have been secured to address the fall series of convo- cations, and communications are; being exchanged in an effort to secure two and possibly three more speakers, according to Mark An-; drews, '29, chairman of the student council convocations committee. William Lyon Phelps, professor of English at Yale and a noted author1 will open the fall series with an address on Nov. 18. He has appear- ed here before as a convocations speaker, and has always drawn en- thusiastic audiences. Van Dusen To Speak Dec. 16 Henry Pitt Van Dusen of the Union Theological seminary has been secured to speak on December 16. Convocations committees have tried for some time to secure a speaking date with Van Dusen, but without success heretofore. Last spring he addressed a congregation in St. Andrew's Episcopal church, and was received tenthusiastically by students. For the three Sundays between November 18 and December 16, the committe is endeavoring to secure George Wharton Pepper, senator from Pennsylvania, John Timothy Stone, pastor of a large Chicago church, and William Allen White,. noted author and, editor of the Emporia (Kansas) Gazette. In addition to the fall series of four or five convocations, there will be a spring series consisting of four, to be held sometime in Feb- ruary or March. No speakers have been secured as yet for the spring convocations. Five on Committee The committee for the current year consists of Mark Andrews, '29, chairman, Paul J. Kern, '29, John Gilmartin, '29, Lois Tilley, '29, and Margaret Babcock, '30. The com- mittee, as formerly, will function as a committee of the Student council, and Andrews was appoint- ed to his post as chairman by that body. He has had more than a full year's experience on the con- vocations committee, serving under John Snodgrass, '28E, through the entire school year of 1927-28. Both Kern and Gilmartin are members of the Student Council and it is possible that a sixth member of the committee will be appointed in the near future from among the juniors of the council. In addition to the acutal pro- grams to be arranged, members of the convocations committee are at work on a plan whereby a spe- cial committee will be appointed to handle the mechancial arrange- ments of the individual convoca- tions. In the past all of these func- tions, such as ushers and similar items, have been in the hands of the single small committee in addi- tion to the other work connected with the convocations. FIRE DEMOLISHES' HOME IN PROCESS OF CONSTRUCTION Fire, believed to have been caused by a workman carelessly leaving a lighted cigarette butt in a basket of oily waste, completely destroyed the home of James C. Dappelbrau, Robbins Court, which was under construction and un- completed at the time of the blaze. The flames, which started in the garage situated below the house, spread rapidly through the dwel- ling, accelerated by several con- tainers of gasoline stored in the garage. The house was enveloped In flames by the time the fire de- partment arrived at the scene of disaster. The trucks were delayed in reaching the house because of the lack of paved roads leading to Robbins Court, which is one of the new streets in the outlying sections east of the city. The de- partment was also hampered by a lack of water, chemicals being re- snrted 'o for the quenching of the rrayer "leased With Freshman Week; Hopes To Learn By Errors. Excellent Cooperation on Part of haps the complaints that there Fraternities and Students were too many speeches were justi- Is Reported fied, although we had been warned about this from other schools and "We made mistakes in our fresh- watched it closely." Other faults! man week program, we'll admit," were pointed out by the new men,' said Prof. William A. Frayer of the and Professor Frayer had several history department yesterday, "but frank talks with freshmen at the on the whole, we had excellent end of the week concerning sug- cooperation and it was much more gested changes and the attitude successful than that of last year." toward the event. These agreed' Professor Frayer is in charge of that the week was a fine thing, the Freshman week programs of and that only minor mattershhad the University. appeared to be wrong and to have "The incoming students cooper- been done from the incorrect ated much better than those of point ofeview. last year, and the fraternities, the Professor Frayer praised the at- upperclassmen, and all the others titude the new ones took toward did splendidly in helping to make the week. Most of them attended the week a success." Among the the various events on the program more successful events were the faithfully. Some, they had trou- smoker at the Union, last Wednes- ble with. They took the examina- day night, the general assembly, tionsseriously as was hoped for, Thursday night, at which songs and attended the scheduled events and cheers were given, and the with regularity. Several took ad- various athletic contests staged vantage of President C. C. Little's especially for the new students. invitation to come to his house "Of course we had complaints after the Monday night program,! and grousings," he continued, "but and held open forum in the Presi- that was a matter of course. Per- dent's home. "As yet, we cannot say much about the changes we will make next year," he said, "but there will be a few." The Sunday program has yet to be settled satisfactorily, as only 40 attended the speech on "The Student's Faith," given by Prof. Thomas Reed of the political science department. "The week undoubtedly was a success, and accomplished most of' Disposition Of Human And Animal that which we wanted," he con- Bodies Is Greatest Task cluded. He also announced that Of Relief Workers the results of the tests were now being collected, and would soon be UIST OF DEATHS GROWS opened to those who would be interested in knowing the results. SATURDAY NIGHT DNBENMY LIFTED SOON FRATERNITIES TO REPORT RECOMMENDATIONS OF COMMITTEE ON DANCES TO BE CLOSED Results to Be Submitted to Dean Bursley's Office During I First School Week Action on the regulations regard- ing fraternity dances to be given after football games are pending the reports from the fraternities on the resolutions passed at a meeting of the Interfraternity Presidents' Discussion group last spring. The resolutions passed were the outgrowth of an investi- gation into conduct at fraternity parties carried on by a committee chosen from that group. The text of the resolutions follows: Resolutions Passed: (1) That the University should require all fraternity dances held on Saturday nights after football games to be strictly closed, i. e., attendance shall be limited to ac- tive members, pledges and alumni only, except that the chaperone need not be a member of the fraternity. (2) That the chaperone must be either a member of the University Senate or a parent of a member of the active chapter. (3) After the party the house president shall turn in a full re- port, giving the number of peopleI in attendance at the party, stating whether or not difficulty was had with uninvited guests, whether or not there was any trouble of any kind during the party, and includ- ing suggestions for improvement in handling future dances. This report shall be signed by both the house president and the chaper- one. Fraternities to Vote The resolutions are to be placed before the various fraternities for a vote and the results given to 4 the Dean of Students, Joseph A. Bursley. Failure on the part of the fraternities to give attention to the matter during the first week of school will result in the for- feiture of the opportunity for the (By Associated Press) WEST PALM BEACH, Fla., Sept. 25-Floodwaters in the hurricanej and devastated lake Okeechobee area were reported gradually re- ceding today despite recent heavy rains making the tas of transport- ing relief to the district less diffi- cult. Aside from the pressing necessi- ties of furnishing food for the hun- gry rescued in the interior and shelter to protect them from the rains, the greatest task faced by the relief workers remained in the disposition of the human and ani- mal bodies. Funeral fires were seen tonight in several parts of the Everglades as the workers went about their grim task forced upon them because of the impossibility of taking out any more bodies for burial and the ne- cessity to dispose of them as a san- itary measure. The death list grew into greater proportions than any had first im- agined and the task of recovering bodies virtually swamped the per- sonnel. Red Cross and military of- ficials now admit that the exact toll of lives taken by the hurricane will never be known. They have been unable to keep an accurate record of all' bodies found, it was said, and the record keepers them- !selves have been busy burying the dead. While Dr. E. D. Clawson, head of the medical relief, declared the death toll would be in excess of 2,300, A. L. Schafer, representative here of the National Red Cross, held to his estimate 'of 1,200 known dead. At the same time Howard W. Selby, chairman of the Palm Beach Red Cross chapter, asserted the known dead at 2,200 on the basis of the survey made for him by O. C. Geiger, who went into the Ever- glades to make an investigation for that purpose. Governor John W. Martin, after placing the estimate at 1,500, declared today in Jack- sonville that it probably will reach 2,200 persons. AHR ARMY AIR PILOT DiES' Daily"o Offer Sunday Pictures Will Deliver 8-page Rotogravure Supplement Beginning October 21 or 28 An eight-page rotogravure sec- tion will be added to the regular Sunday edition of the Daily, begin- ning October 21 or 28, according to an announcement yesterday by Edward Hulse, '29, business man- ager. The supplement, to be known as the Michigan Daily Campus Pictorial, will include pictures of events and celebrities both from this campus and other campuses throughout the east, west, and Big Ten. Arrangements are being made now with a Chicago firm for doing the rotogravure work. The supple- ment has been made financially possible by interesting more than 20 other college papers in the proposition, all of whom will con- tribute pictures and distribute the I pictorial to their subscribers. CALL 1TRYOUTS FOR DEBATING' Prof. J. O'Neil To Judge 5-Minute Speeches By Candidates For Squads TO HOLD FOUR CONTESTS Try-outs for Speech 81, the pub- lic speaking course from which members of the men's and women's varsity debating teams will be Se- lected, will be held in Room 3209 AH at 1 o'clock Thursday after- noon, Prof. James M. O'Neil stated yesterday. Only students who have taken Speech 34, who have represented the university on a debating team, or who have successfully tried out may enter the course. Five Minute Speeches The try-out speeches Thursday will be five minutes in length, and women will speak on the topic se- lected for the woman's intercol- legiate debates: "Resolved; that so- cial sororities and fraternities are a detriment to state universitie. The men's intercollegiate debate question has not yet been chosen so men cadidates for Speeches 81 may talk on either Hoover or Smith. Although members of the varsity debate teams will be picked from this course those who wish to com- pete for positions on the squad need not attend classes except dur- ing the period of the debates in December. Only those who par- ticipate regularly throughout the 'semester, however, will receive credit for the course, Professor O'Neil announced. Debating Leagues Combined The Mid-West and Central de- bating leagues have been combined this year in a Western conference debating league which will hold four contests each year. All mem- bers of the football Big Ten with the exception of the University of Chicago which does not sponsor debating, are also members of the Western league. Under the new plan Michigan will meet four of her eight oppo- nents each year, two in December I and two in March. These will be . triangular contests. The women's debates will be held in January. Professor O'Neil urges every woman in the university interested in de- r bating, to attend the class Thurs- -day. Lieut. W. Death L. Cornelius Crashes as Two Planes Lock Wings in Air to CONSIDERS CAMPAIGN WORK ' IN DOUBTFUL CORN BELT SECTION NO PLANS ARE DISCLOSED Acceptance of St. Louis Invitation ( Depends Upon Route of Homeward Journey (By Associated Press) WASHINGTON, Sept. 25.-Her- bet Hoover had a busy day today, I working for a while on his Eliza- bethan, Tenn. speech and receiving more on the political situation in! the middle-west. He also held his r semi-weekly conference with news- t paper correspondents, but would i not disclose whether his campaign plans would be extended to include addresses in a number of cities tor which he had been invited, includ- ing a recent invitation from St. Louis. Governor John Hammill of Iowa,t brought to the Republican presi- dential candidate a lengthy survey1 of conditions in the corn belt and Iowa in particular. The governort was accompanied to the Hoover headquarters by Dr. Herbert Work,{ chairman of the Republican na-I tional committee. Considers Mid-west Campaignt With Roy O. West, Secretary of the Interior department, and form-t er secretary of the national com- mittee, Hoover also discussed the political situation in the middle- west. Plans for an extension of the1 campaign work in that sectiona were considered. From Walter J. Kohler, Repub- lican nominee for governor of Wis- consin, the presidential candidate received information on conditions; in the Badger state. Kohler said afterwards that the Hoover-Curtis ticket had " a good chance" to carry the state, but said, he would withhold a more positive prediction until after the forth-, coming visit of the Democratic' presidential candidate, Alfred E. Smith. Speeds Press Conference Hoover's press conference was one of the briefest on record. Mak- ing his way through the group of nearly half a hundred newspaper- men in the semi-circle room at his headquarters, the candidate an- nounced that he had nothing on his mind and said in response to questions that he was unable to help the correspondents with re- spect to a number of subjects with which they greeted him. They included whether he is to extend his speech tour; whether his Elizabethan speech will deal with water power; and if he is to speak in St. Louis on his way back to his California home to vote. Invited to St. Louis 1 It was disclosed that the nominee has a very strong invitation from St. Louis, but his acceptance will depend upon the route of his homeward journey, whether it hur- ries him to the north or to the south. Invitations also have been received from a nu aer of other cities and these likewise are under consideration. WEATHER FORECAST I Lower Michigan: Mostly fair but some cloudiness, not quite so cold south portions Wednesday; Thurs- - day fair to partly cloudy, slightly - warmer in south and central por- tions. SMITH ENDS WESTERN TOUR WITH CORRUPTION CHARGES; HOOVER STUDIES CORN BELT HAD BRILLIANT CAREERj (By Associated Press) SAN DIEGO, Cal., Sept. 25.- Death struck into the reign of the "Three Musketeers" of the Army! air service again today and wrote RARE COURAGE' OF G. IS STATEMENT HE WANTS PROVEN O. P. finis to the brilliant career of i hpe ohv'viei h ia Lieut. W. L. Cornelius, the secondcterntaeon the una of the daring trio of army 'pursuit action taken on the subject.i pilots to be killed within two At the spring meeting of the weektsdiscussion group there was some weeksut. Cornelius fell to his death difference of opinion as to whether wen hisrlneus loed ins din or not it would be better for the when his plane locked wings in University to reenact the regula- mid-air with another craft piloted tion in effect last fall prohibitingI by Lieut. Roger Williams of Spo- dances on Saturday nights after kane, Wash. at Rockwell Field 1,--------- ,u, uoa gms._ resoiu-,. WILL SPEAK AT ST. PAUL laims Hoover Knows Record of Republican Party Better Than Anyone Else (By Associated Press) HELENA, Mont., Sept. 25.-Gov. mith turned eastward yesterday fter having thrown a vigorous hallange to his Republican oppo- ent, Herbert Hoover, to prove in he face of "corruption and crime" n high government circles, the as- ertion in his speech of accept- nce that the Republican party's :ecord during the last seven and L half years "constitutes a period f rare courage and leadership and eadership and constructive ac- ion." With party' responsibilities as dis text and a state next door to Teapot Dome as his battleground, ;he Democratic nominee, in his ourth speech of the campaign in ;his valley capital of Montana, londay night traced the history f the oil, veterans bureau, and alien property custodian disclos- ires, and directed a plea to the lepublican nominee, whom he :harged with sitting silently by uring the engagement of this 'story of intrigue and corruption," o show how he can look back with any degree of satisfaction on that record. Gov. Smith delivered his speech :>efore a crowd that taxed the ca- pacity of the Shrine temple, and applauded him at frequent inter- vals, especially when he concluded by saying that it "would be ex- :eedingly harmful if the American people were willing to look back omplacently over the past and all it a record of great accom- plishment." Applauded by Senators Senator Thomas J. Walsh, who prosecuted the oil inquires, and Senator Burton K. Wheeler, who had a leading part in the Daugh- erty investigation during the Harding - Coolidge regime, both Montanans, sat on the platform and both joined in the handclap- ping at important junctures of the speech. Gov. John Erickson of Montana also sat near the candidate, who oday starts the long 'jump back to his native stateofg New York ith two more speeches on his schedule-at St. Paul Thursday night and at Milwaukee Saturday night. After attending the New York state convention at Rochester next Monday, he will return to Albany and rest the remainder of the week before taking the stump again. Gov. Smith opened his address Monday night with, a reference to a dispatch quoting Mr. Hoover as telling a group of young students from Maryland that the new gen- eration "must begin now to take over the responsibility of the party and to carry it out." He then re- cited the long history of the oil and other investigations, declaring the sworn testimony that came out of the investigation of the leas- ing of the oil reserves, was a "story of intrigue, of corruption, of trick- ery and of chicanery that has never been equalled in all the history of this nation." "Hoover Knows Record" "Not only did the evil influence of this whole deal contaminate the administration, but it disgraces party leadership," he asserted, add- ing that "nobody in the United States can say there is no party responsibility for that. That's right on the door step. It couldn't get away if it tried. "Is the record, the real record of the past seven and a half years known to the Republican candidate for president?" he asked, and then continued: "Why, there is not a single man in this country that knows it bet- ter than he does. He sat in the cabinet of the president while all of this was going on, and you can search that record from one end to the other, you can examine it in the minutest details, and you will fail to find a single word of nniattnainnnn ie n4r,, I her. he 'los. .e . hgjini ome Football games. The resolu- ere. The pilots were flig in tions were passed in order that' battle formation.d fraternities themselves might have1 Reports from the field said thatis an opportunity to express their Lieut.d Corneius ldeaed whis opinions. Record of chapter votes disabled plane and was killed when should be turned in to the office his parachute failed to open. Lieut. of the Dean of students immedi- Williams was seriously, injured in ately, with a statement indicating the crash. , whether or not the fraternity does Lieut. J. A. Williams, leader of or does not favor Saturday night the little band of airmen whose ;football dances. daredevil exploits and commander- ing gave them the moderate pro-, CONVENIENT FIRE totypes of the romantic "Three Musketeers" of fiction, was killed HELPS REPOR TERS only two, weeks ago while heading his fellows in drilling, formation at Those long-suffering public serv- Aneles iona air races at Los ants, known collectively as the Angs -press, often chase fire engines for miles and undergo extreme physi- CHEERING SECTION cal hardship and peril that their readers may know what burned. One hundred and twenty- I ; Yesterday afternoon, however, they five seats in the cheering sec- I got a break. The firemen pulled I tion are still available at the ; up in front of the Press building I Administration b u i 1i i n g. I on Maynard St. and put in three minutes of intensive searching for the fire. Reporters opened the of- TAKES CHARGE fice windows and swung their type- CAKES C ARGE Iwriters in-to action for a play by F ADMINISTRATION play account of the conflagration, but not even a smouldering ciga trips to Ann Arbor for consulta- butt could be found to extinguish tion with the other University ad- The firemen went home, but ministrative officials. came back again about 15 minutes Thus, although the office is not later on a hot tip that the blaz a new one, this fall will mark the was in an alley a little farther first time when it has really had down the street. They found i an opportunity to fill its place in the second time, struggling har the University administrative or- to get spectacular, but considerably ganization. discouraged by a bucket of water The dean of administration as that some passer-by had thrown an office was created to meet the A healthy dousing with chemicals needs arising from the size and caused it to flicker -and die. complexity of the University. It is designed to give the university an I officer who will be fully acquainted XITTLE PLANS SIX with the details of the academic TALKS TO ALUMNI policy. As the busniess manager of _ the University prepares the annual'Six speaking engagements befor budget, it will be the office of the Alumni clubs have already beer dean of administration to justify Alumni clb haeaeady bLe any economy or expense placed in arranged for President C. C. Lit DR. A. G. RUTHVEN AS NEW DEAN O Dr. Alexander G. Ruthven, pro- fessor of zoology, is taking charge this fall of his new office as dean of administration. Although the office was created more than a year ago in the spring of 1927, and Dean Ruthven was named to the position at the Regent's meeting last June, he did not take active charge of his work until this fall. The office of dean of administra- tion was created simultaneously by the Board of Regents with the of- fice of business manager of the University at the May, 1927, meet- ing of the Board. Dean Edmond- E. Day, of the school of education at that time was named first dean I of administration. Owing to delay in the making of '! . t sI e r t d y r 1. s a .e n -7 ANGRY BUT F RESHMEN SEEK VENGEANCE NARY A SOPHOMORE IS FOUND "Run, Soph, Run!" "Yea, '32, rah, rah!" "Run, Soph, Run!," again the freshman warcry swept down State street and one small youth, hardly big enough to be in high school,' walked slowly down the street while heros of '32, more than 40 in number passed on to other fields of glory. It was a far cry from the after-' noon before when lordly sopho- mores backed by maudlin juniors and seniors sent long legged fresh- men hastening down the center of Michigan's "Main Street" 'to the happy tunes of "Pot Frosh." But the freshmen, flaunting pots of grey and cheering repeatedly without the stern portals of Helen Newberry for a few moments and freshman like to submit a new ser- enade for the benefit of the lonely inmates within those black and forbidding walls. The words to their song were not{ quite distinct and perhaps it was'l just as well for from time to time one might hear the name of the class of '31 repeated in terms not to be construed as complimentary. Still even Michigan's daughters hesitated to thwart the mighty, freshmen and they determinedly, strode on to the end of the di- agonal and taking that great tri- butary of traffic moved bodily for- ward, on to the library and some