T H E, C- A N 1,-ATE- .HE. T - -AN I. Statesman-,Is President Elected of Greece Torn Mooney Case, Pending for Ten Years, TV D ENT Y,,Will Go"Before California Parwole Board LINS OO eN TO FAECOCES O TEJI ETS rEvidence Compiled for Defense uwa: convicted. In the Grand Jury Lowry mnd Cook to be Delegates; -it Lehind Staniford. Man W\as Fgamed. ilr t.W5dirun' h h F~or liiuli were macIllde. J11or,"praw IdAsociatFolk' SUNDI93LAN1 TOSPA of the nmost dismissed ecases in the from 11the ) top h o[erbuild- WILURISONPRGR M ountry. Now the case is pending ing, more than fo11u r<<:onsan feet, 1, - rti H .-aiI - I , TI l --I' n JIV DL vU l ., £ A Prbini F--erii to atvi ,vitl fil he posi ilif y l ,t.Mooney ties of the uander gradluate body of will" be [treed. the Uniive zs ty will be amaong the fie w a wrested followiazg a!a topics for discussion at thefifth obn hiholieddiia 1treparedness Day parade in San annual congress of Wlae National IFrnLc nJl 2 96 ih i Student Federation of America, people w~ere killed and forty-two it which will convene.,.Jan. 1, 2, 3, 'were injured,.lie wa s charged with t ' ~~and 4 at Leland Stanford universi-i first degree murder aand s entenced!n ty.Pl Alto, California. tohan- in January, 1917. Later ;I - ---Williard Lowry, '30, and Eleanor. i etnews2oin e olf Cooke, '31, representing the Studentiiapisoiinaent;. Since then all the' Alexander Za mis. ;council and the Women's league,wxitnesse~s have stated that their' Former premier, who was chosen, respectively, will be the delegates testimony was framed but still i nex prsidnt f reee a a e-for the Univeristy. They will in- nothing has been dlone about it.s cet ol otse lcin a-troduce matters relative to the Some of the most interesting f cen.* oty cntste eecton Za-;student body at the assemablage,; evidence was found after Mooneyr mis has been active in Greek Poll-' which will be attended by more t - -r____ _____ tical affairs for nearly a decade. than 250 representative college andj .-__- _ -_J university student leaders from all IliITL flVUV fl nrrnuvtP oerati onryth w AJT A II T Iproblems to be presented £or i cnsieraionby he wodelegates are the honor system in a largej D B SE T E E Tuniversity, student government i LfA X E D T R co-educational institution, publica -___ Sin.FnlFrnhPatWrkd atter deals with a plan for the Interest Burden Causes Curbing, Sigs FnalFrech actWoredpurchase of books and other scho- of Borrowing; Will Stopy Ou yCm iso;Ohr lastic supplies through the co-opernevlopea Loans. OutbyCortnisin;Oter ative efforts of the University of- _____ Countries to Pay. ficials and the student body. SThe purpose of the federation, 11 WILL ELIMINATE LOSSES U. S. TO GET 13 MIL LIONS .which was organized four yearT ago;-- l ___at Princeton university, is to (BY A.;z~rwiated PrrsA) (By Associated Pros achieve a spirit of cooperation STIDNEY, Dec. 19-- The annual among the students of America for burden of Australian loan interest, WASHINGTON, Dec. 19- Presi- the consideration of questions af -' which has reached $300,000,000, has dent Hoover laid aside today a task fecting students' interests, to de- caused the Australian Loan coun- t he began working upon seven years! velope an intelligent opinion on cil to slow dlown the rate of its loant ago as . member of the World war questions of national and inter- i expenditures. foregn ebtfuningcomisson, national importance, and to pro- As a new country with vast re- ,,frein dbt undng omassin' mote an understanding in the fur-! sources to develop Australia has! EIn affixing his signature to the therance of an enduring world; necessarily been a heavy borrower. Trench debt settlement, the chief; peace. The 1926 Congress was held R oads, railways and other public 'executive had the satisfaction of.I in Ann Arbor. The University has C work~s have had to be unTdertaken bestowing the formal approval of hada delegate at all of the con- that have placed a tremnendous bur- tecutyuo thlatstl-gresses.; den on the 6,000,000 inhabitants of mtecntrthoeporkh l edo ttethe Dr. Ray Lyman Wilbur, Secre- the country. The federal and state men~ ofthoe wrke ou bythei tary of the Interior and president, I governments have been spending I commission for funding the indebt- of Stanford university, will addres,' annualy about $200,000,000 of loan edness of 13 nations,.tUnder them, th eeae t4ocok Jn .mny u hsya's exedtr, the United States will receive 13 theseechtewill be brcoaca by a onhys but tdown to $112,000,000.r billion dollars. national system, over 52 stations. Such sinks for money as the That f Prnce ncludd no 1onThis~ will be the first of a series off Queensland state trading concerns, funds loaned that country during: monthly broadca, s arranged by which had, under the Labor regime,, T the World war but many millions; the federation. Dr. Wilbur's topic been losing millions of dollars, are, wereof oldro herpls after ateronlct Will be "The American Students' i being eliminated, and in other di- a eded.sThetotha trtoeidfby tt Responsibility of Citizenship in thef rections also a severe curb is being a ned h ttltob pi y htModern World." placed upon loan expenditures. 'country over a 62 year period is,_________- The fact that the commnonwealth $6,847,674,104, of which $2,822,674,-1I Mississippi State College for M has had to pay better than six per 104 will be paid as interest.- l Women has a grand total of .sixty-E cent for its latest London loan, al- Just before President Hoover ( one schools represented on its' though the issuq was limited to 121I w ee madeto mc, rrangmcte. teaching corps. One wonders now months, is a sufficient indication weremad tocpie h many of the professors are "con-I that the limitation of expenditure aGreek war debt, funding of which firmed" batchelors!I has been timely. had not been completed when the l _______________________ i commission expired in 1927. fromi 1h10 oef0 thin toW', were (4v11 IiUemher)t'. of IItefic e idty of Pnlarget I a:1~ ,,io wed 1)l isllIyMooney Lt :ithe aw School 1illat (e1dC'h and hi ,s1:1w ifewR -ein-1 thl- )al'ade meei Iting.oflthe AsIoiltintl1 okf romIli to 01~l W81 l)~i~ifL. Law Sileolfivl whhvill li eld in F u rth e r Iene w rrk a n.i ite c e nvo wTd ,'i'-3 0 , picture O yo sre t(Kok.tlte>' ienIicnbr2-0 Glyne of tee 1oues ~~ ~~ Those \who .are goring are1'CDean ten minues before to twieaniy live Iieiiry M. Bates,, 1Prof). PatiI A. I idIy, ninutes after two. TusiU would Prof. Eason R. Sunderland, Ilrof. have been a pliyswl -diii losibiity Johnl B. Waite, Prof. Jochn P. Da1w- for M ooney even o av been otii o ,P o .I t r e l ;,-v , w l"-)f the scene 01 thie cime rfwureS.r~, tdP In addition tc, thiS':lI tyre State's CH. F'. Ca rey . vithnesses lave ;incle definitely? Professor Shartel vill prsie t saidl that their tist jiinily t a round-table on Jui~riprudenciie aned framned. Mooney was a n outstanding; Legal history, and atfthie rnme .adie