ESTABLISHED IC ja 4A m ME j j\/rMy'_y B/*y , {may'{, 1 ASS/ / N/4 Ii i EYIfM' f PRA VOL. LX. NO. 140 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, .- FRIDAY, APRIL 11 1930 EIGHT PAGES PRICE FIVE CENTS FATHERHS AND SONSi PLAN FOR ANAL Prof. Brumm to be Toastmaster,1 Dean Effinger to Represent Faculty at Meeting. DATE SET FOR MAY 10 Athletic Association to Supply Passes for Michigan- Illinois Game. Preliminary plans are being for-' mulated for the Union's annual Father and Son banquet WhichJs , to be held in the ballroom of the Union on Saturday night, May 10, according to an announcement made yesterday by Kenneth M. Lloyd, '32L, president. The date for the Father and Son I week-end has been set to coincide with that of Cap Night which will be held on Friday, May 9, in SleepyI Hollow. In the past it has been the custom for fraternities to co- operate with the Union in makingj this week-end one with a complete program for the entertainment of~ tha v chino, -Fthar- Tt .'ipexp BAN ENFORCEMENT TO CEASE AT NOONN Students who are going home for and those who axe to stay in townAS SENATE PASSES1 spngvaewhati. onay ie there may use automobiles to tour Ann' Arbor and Ypsilanti by-ways, after noon today. That hour has been BILLS set by the office of 4he dean of students as the deadline of auto Legislation for Day Includes ban enforcement. Lgsain frDyIcue At 12:01 o'clock this afternoon, Laws on Supply,.Campaign its is expected that the streets will: Chests, Unemployment. be filled with students who have bent carefully priming their cars HARRIS BILL IS PENDING for the big moment. They will be permitted to speed by University enforcement officers, with nothing Commerce Committee Approves! but the city speed laws to fear. Establishment of Board Men will be able to drive tonight, to Detroit, and come back when for Labor System. they please, not concerned with J making the 1:15 or the 5:45 trains. . (By Associated Press) Of course, enforcement will again WASHINGTON, April 10.-Estab- start at 8 o'clock Monday morning, lishing almost a record for accom- April 21; but then, that's not until plishment for itself today, the Sen- after vacation. ate passed two of the annual sup- REALTORS EXPECT RENTALSHORTAGE' EhLocal realtors, at a meeting of the Ann Arbor Real Estate Board held last night, emphasized that there will be a shortage i several classes of rental property this com- ing season. It was a consensus of' opinion that there is a scarcity of1 good rental property at the pres- ent time. All offices report a greater demand than usual at this time of the year. This came as a surpriseG due to the vacancy survey madej in January of this year. Reports made to the board show-' ed that there were 160 single houses vacant in the city at the presentI time. This included all houses, some of which were in the "un- inhabitable" class. A distinct in-' crease in realaestate buying was' noted for the last month.f BRUMMDISS FIVE POWER MEETI T ADJOURN SOON LONDON Apil 10-The London naval conference will be wound up next week with a three-power agreement forming the backbone of a skeleton five-power pact which -France and Italy can join even be- "Newspaper and Public Morals' fore they settle their differences on parity. Subject of Sixth All- The way was clear today when Campus Forum. the United States, Great Britain, and Japan, after nearly three CITES POWER OF PRESS months of negotiations, sealed their CITESPOWE OF RESSnaval accord. And a dramatic last minute move Calls Presentation of Picture, by the American delegation sal-: of Society Newspaper's vaged the five-power treaty when the conference seemed doomed as Primary Function, far as agreement on any point was -concerned. Naval conference ex- Declaring that the morals of the ; perts were understood to have been average metropolitan newspaper put to work this afternoon drafting cannot be judged without taking a five-power agreement which both into consideration its environment, Foreign Ministers Briand of France' and Grandi of Italy have tentative-c Prof. J. L. Brumm of the journal- ly agreed to sign as an outgrowth 11 + VIRGINIA STUDENTS BOYCOTT THEATRES' Two Seriously Injured, Others Less Critically Hurt When Undergraduates Riot. BLOCK STREET TRAFFIC Uprising Quelled by President's Plea for Arbitration With Movie House Managers. (Sptial a he Dailu No further uprising by Univer- sity of Virginia students in their campaign to bring about reduc- finriyrrrn n ~ern~aci' FE[MININE NOMINEE, FETEDIN__CAPITALi Mrs. McCormick, Candidate for Senate from Illinois, to, Cn ,i fn Ortmber 1 i 1 1 1 7 , a 1 1 . '1 , , a 1 3 ,Y LIe visli ng ainel:). er Lu. sb U'. w %-ampalgn in vZiVV A the majority of-the houses on the ': campus will participate in the pro- TO RETURN TO WYOMING' gram.W Will Reserve Tables. ( oldPess) Groups which will be composed ofI six or more will be able to reserve WASHINGTON, April 10.-After! tables so that they may attend the being whirled into Washington affair as a unit. . with a flag-wining welcome from Letters announcing aid explain- ing the purpose of the panquet will her women colleagues in Congress, be mailed in about two weeks to the Representative Ruth Hanna Mc- father or guardian of every student Cormick, victorious -Republican who lives within - a -radius of 300" miles from nn Arbor. nominee, for the Illinois' senator-. Through the courtesy of theAth- ship, 'announced today' that she letic association, complimentary would not start campaigning foi tickets to the Illinois-Michigan election until October. baseball game, which will be play- I For she is looking forward to a ed on Saturday afternoon, will be rest in her ranch retreat in Wyo- distributed to fathers holding tick- ming, in the rugged Jackson Hole ets to the Father and Son ban- country, inthehe interim b tween quet. In addition, the Butterfield the close of this session of Con-' theate re. ;~will provide pass- gress. and the fall campaign. es for" the Saturday night perf orm- ' Just a - little log cabin," is" the ance at the Majestic theatre. way she described it, "my ranch. Several well-known men are un- not my farm." der consideration as principal Mrs. McCormick's home farm in speaker; among them are Harold Illinois is a business, not a recrea- H. Emmons, Detroit Police commis- I tion, and the remote Wyoming sioner, Frank Cody, superintendent spot obviously has a great lure foi of the Detroit Schools, and Edward the woma'n who hs 'been making Evans, of Detroit, noted world trav- many, campaign speeches. eler. The campaign just over she Effinger to Speak. would not discuss. It was all over Dean John R. Effinger, of the she said, and she pushed it into the literary college, will sp'eak as repre- past with a' final gesture of her sentative of the faculty. He is the hand. Nor would she talk about father of John R. Effinger, Jr.,'30,. her appointment to visit with Pres- who is now a student on the cam- ident Hoover tomorrow at 5 p. m pus. She was "swamped" she said. Prof. John L. Brumm, head of the "completely swamped," with work department of journalism, will actthat had piled up in her two Wash- as toastmaster. ington offices while she was whirl-' gramhis nder Fther dion o t winding through Illinois. gram is under the direction of the; She mnade no appearance today reception committee of the Union, She made o ahearane oday of which Walter Reichenback, '30, is on the floor of the House, so the chairman, and Alfred Plamer, '32, is majority of her colleagues had nc assistant chairman. p opportunity to express their reac- _____________ tion to her victory. DEFER SEAT SALE First to welcome her at the sta-j DEFREATH FALCE tion, however, was the Democratic FOR FRENCH FARCE sister Representative, Ruth Bryan S-- Owen, a warm personal friend of Box office sale of seats for "Her long standing though their fathers Cardboard Lover" will start Friday, were political foes. April 18, instead of today as orig- Mrs. McCormick's d a u g h t er, inally announced in The Daily yes- Katherine, accompanied her from terday. The production will be giv- Chicago, and her son, Medill, 13,. en in the Lydia Mendelssohn the- and her little daughter, Ruth Eliza-l atre the week of April 21 to 26. beth, called "Dazie" met her atI No performance will be given on the train. Friday night, April 25, but a mati- -I nee is planned for Saturday after"' ,I noon, April 26. Tickets for the' Price of Invitations! main floor for the night perform-;I ances are priced at '$1.00 and the to Rise After Today balcony is priced 'at 75 cents. The matinee prices are 75 cents for the; main floor and 50 cents for the ; Increase in price of Commence- balcony. Mail order applications ment invitations and announce- are being received at the box office ments will become effective after of the Lydia Mendelsohn theatre today, Jennings McBride, '30, com- now. mnittee chairman, said yesterday. n______The bids will be sold today at a . . lLebooth in Angell hall lobby for the Fishbeim Will Lecture last time. After spring vacation, at Hillel Foundation theycan be ordered only by special arrangements with, the publishers,, Dr. Morris Fishbein, editor of theI at increased prices, it was announc- ' A- i n t n I 'd. ply bills totaling almost one iim- n reare ds sdh - of American intervention tiso 1 lion,' five hundred million dollars,'i ism depatment iscussed the su- nAerg nt him- movie theatres were reported in a ordered an investigation of Sena- 0ject"The Newspaper and Public mng.Utelegram received late last night torial campaign chests, and re- ;n(Morals" at the sixth of the spring from the University News bureau ceived from its committee legisla- series of All-Campus Forums yes- 111 V LII f at Virginia. Before taking further tion on unemployment artd reor- U 1 1 { U I terday afternoon in Alumni Mem- drastic action, they are awaiting ganization of the federal power '__orial Hall.F'ce commission Uh uUeNTof a conference to be t th Speak on Tomorrow Night's press is to report the news that I leaders and the theatre manage- the long session and brough gives a true picture of society. ment, it was said. Senate considerably nearer the Weekly Broadcast.Since a newspaper is a business, it 1Cocky' Attitude Is Fostered by Meanwhile, the boycott move- June first adjournment date. must be interesting in order to Freshman Week, Says Moser ment grows and more than a thou- The Harris bill plcing Central MUSIC TO BE OFFERED succeed. Many people assume the sand have signed agreements not and South America under immi-I advertisers dictate the, policy of at Yearling Banquet. to patronize movie houses until gration quota restrictions was Tomorrow night's campus radio the paper since advertising makesi--- prices are reduced. More names pending at night fall. program, in spite of the vacation up the difference between the price MAKE AWARD OF MEDALS j are being added each hour. Dry Fund Passed. period, will feature four faculty paid and the cost of printing it. Will Demand Reduction. j The treasury- and post office de- speakers and a musical presenta- Owners Not Journalists. Although freshman week is re- John Sloan, football captain, will partment appropriation bills carry- tion by members of the faculty of ' The owners of the papers, who puted to be o great value in ac- probably head the student com- ighe onmenof$15,00,000foremntth hool Wadof Musi, darccordg tho direct the policies, are not journal- climating first-year men to Uni- mittee that will ask for a reduc- prohibition enforcement, went iProf.. Waldo Abbot, director of the ists. This is' unfortunate since versity life, iv also permits fresh tion in admission. Students -say drfun. his easre' abtotaled Dr. Albert M. Barrett, director of the average professional journal- men to assume a most objectionable! that 75 cents, charged for some $1,180;]0E,528, an increase of $2,- the State Psychopathic hospital. ist, working for the paper, is jeal- I"cocky" attitude before the arrival pictures, is the highest price in the 000,000 over the amount provided will discuss the treatment of the ous for the honor of the profession. of the upperclassmen on the cam- state. by the House curable insane at that institution. He regards the paper as a social pus, Henry Moser, of the speech No serious injuries resulted from IyNo trouble was encountered in Professor Barrett is considered one institution to be administered fo: 'department, alleged in addressing the demonstration last night when rushing through the $280,211,973 of the fore iost authorities on in- public good, stated Professor ma:mbers of the class of 1933 at the 1,000 students blocked the street in Spropsed by the - appropiriatonssanity in thoe country and is often Brumm. Uniun's third annual all-freshman front of the Jefferson theater fo committe to carry oh the vast in- called upon to-determine the sanity In discussing the influence banquet last night. Not more than more than an hour. ternor development program under :of individuals in criminal and civil wielded by the press on the com- 10 years ago, obstreperous yearl- I Ry Asscaed I'ress ior Department for next ty, he declared that the pa- ings were made conscious of their t Prof. Hugh E. Keeler of the me- per occupied a strategic position position on campus within a week CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va., April year.: 'chanical engineering department 'weeitcou dairv : r~,~a .~Heir. Div a ;byh Qde} 0 >. members of the team which won marched down Main St. to the the- net. talk about color harmonies in dress; TEPIC NAYARIT, Mexico, April the basketball tournament spon- atre. Leaders of the demonstra- Senator Couzens, Michigan, the and Coach Harry Kipke will give 10.-On the morrow of his release' sored by the Union. The men who tion gained a conference with the author of the measure said he a short discussion of the football from more than a month of cap- received the charms were Jolly management, and while they were I would seek early consideration by schedule for the coming fall, and tivity at the hands of bandits who Dziatkowski, T. A. Behrstock, Ted inside, their followers showered the the Senate. will point out the problems pre- held him for ransom, J. E. Bristow, Small, W. A. Behrstock, Ray Ral- front of one of the theatres with sented by the schedule and the ca- American mining man, in a com- linge, and Keith Crossnan. eggs, broke electric light bulbs, and R UTHVEN TO SPE AK pabilities of the players who will be plete report to Mexican military au- The banquet was sponsored by locked traffic. thriie today accused the guide th necasdeatetoCh A policeman cautioned a student AT GU ILD ME E TING ,The musical interims will be pre- t Union and under the direction of An AT GUILDtMEETINbyn Ann Arbor High mpnying him at the time of Robert W. Ackerman, '31, and Jos against his actions and was thrown ____sented by the AnAbrHg oetW cemn 3,adJs Pres. Alexander G. Ruthven wil school Girls' Glee club. his capture of having deliverec eph A. Witter, '31. to the sidewalk and roughly han- be the speaker at the annual Inter-, According to Professor Abbot, ap him over to the bandits. --ded. Almost the entire police force Guild meeting to be held on Sun- I proximately 4,000 envelopes con- Mr. Bristow affirmed that T. C. ChargeSChoo1 H was called out. day, April 27, at six o'clock in West- taining the free bulletin of radio Fields, who had been hired as in- Ceauge c oolAfter President Alderman inter- ley Hall, it was announced today 1 talks have been address to listeners terpreter and guide had laid a kid- .With 1Ft h i vened the students agreed to sub- Iby the Westleyan Guild who are throughout the state who have re- naping plot in concert with theWe a S 1 5h1 mit the matter to arbitration be- S i ted th Delgado bandits. 4___tween a student committee and s gh rs-(B ssociatedPress> Fred Twyman, theatre manager. A SPECIAL TRAINS BUSES, AIRPLANES TO CONVEY LANSING April 10.-For several conference will be held Friday. SPECI Ar A N , BUSES, AIRPLAUINESC T\( CV AJweeks, G. H. Burt superintendent ! Rrrv" " r.,x r cr1T V TT'10% 'gC TJC/)VE pr~v cvDTN t2. XJACA TIO~N !of schools at Byron in Shiiawassee MIST HINDERS.,DON WEhAR Y 51 U U JZIN 1 k r-ium .'viz- ,Jr iii "-aV.. ',r l' cou icon American ma u dc 'i associa Quarterly, has been engaged tol speak before a campus audience on April 30, under the auspices -of thet H ill1 e 1 Foundation, discussing1 "Quacks and Quackeries." Dr. Fishbein, who is known' throughout the country for his con- stant fight against "quackeries" in medicine, is author of many stand- ard medical works, and a staff writer for several of the current national periodicals. English Lecturer Will Give Readings Sunday One of the most distinguishedl English word artists. Dr. John Duxbury, of London, England, is scheduled to speak at 7:30 o'clock Sunday night at the Methodist church under the auspices of the Wesley Guild. Dr. Duxbury, formerly professor By R. L. T. Cleveland, South Bend, and St. ? Fifty stude Once more the student body--or dated at. 3:21 o'clock. Each of the Louis are tI most of it at least-will today mi- two specials is capable of taking ing reached b grate to all points of the compass care of about 300 students, and re- to University: for a brief but welcome ten-day i servations indicate that a large 'though more respite from bluebooks andthree-E number are taking advantage of serve places b deck Sandwiche Shoppe Specials. the additional service. According addition to th2 Having endured all the hardships to railroad officials, special sections ule, the Unio of the blasts of an academic win- for east and west bound trains will pounces two s ter-or a winter of academic blasts be added if necessary. New York Cit: -the weary students are quite .-_-----. ials to Clevelo ready to forsake the old town for cago, and St.] a few days, and are not reticent Our Weather Mian accommodate about their enthusiasm. _______ ing a total of Yesterday's warm weather slow- -.. - - seek a week's ed down preparations somewhat as oline transpor the inertia of spring settled upon Flint and T the nostalgic intellectuals but on h- \ ning from th the whole the outlook for a pleas- -- tions today, 'v ant homeward trip was much gers are fir brighter than at Christmas time available ever when ten-foot snowdrifts blocked --. For those w the rails hetween here and Chicago '- ~-- or whose fin nts are flying home fis' he destinations be- mu y special air service vat men and women, al- to are expected to re-th 7efore this evening. In the Ae regular bus sched- fist n travel bureau an- !of pecial Greyhounds to IF. y, via Canada. Spec- fisc and, Pittsburgh, Chi- an Louis are expected to about 200 more, inak-' nearly 1000 who will D rest by means of gas- tation. Toledo buses are run- ree to five extra sec- L while Detroit passen- '-- nding transportation in y half hour. na ho live too far away shE ancial standing is at ly. nty, had complained to state nservation department of illegal hing and spearing in his com- .nity. George Hogarth, conser- tion director, asigned. three men j investigate the report. The three deputies, according to, eir report today, found two 'me- hing on tihe Byron mill pond, oneI them was Burt. The other was A. Curtis. Their boat was con-' cated and they were' fined $50' d costs each. runken Witness Gets 20 Fine and 20 Days (BR Associated Press) LOUISVILLE, Kentucky, April 10 F. H. Long, prosecuting witness a theft case, sailed into crimi- l court here today with several eets in the wind and listing bad- IN TRY FOR RECORD (By Associated Press) DAYTONA BEACH, April 10.- Fine mist, which collected on the windshield of Kaye Don's Silver Bullet machine and obscured his vision prevented the British racing champion from attaining a speed of more than 182 miles per hour in his unsuccessful attempt to break the straightaway speed rec- ord. Don said the mist water was kicked up byhthe nearby surf or splattered against the windshield when he was forced to drive through a thin sheet of water near the end of the officially measured mile. He said he 'would take the machine on the course again about 10 a. m. tomorrow, to make an assault on the record of 231 mnie an honr. established here' a