ESTABLISHED 1890 Y Ar 40 A-16 .AIL -A.,Aoe 4w 1640 XWIIW t ile 4 ARPOIF, 4 mtl MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVE RSITY OF MICHIGAN VOL. XLI. No. 110 EIGHT PAGES ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, MARCH 7, 1931 PRICE FIVE CENTS DE[MOCRATS ASSAIL RASKOB FOR STAND ON LIQUOR CONTROL Plank Proposing State Control of Liquor Results in Opposition. LEADERS DIRECT ATTACK Senator Caraway Charges Party Chieftain Lined up' on Economic Issues. (By Associated Press) WASHINGTON, March 6.-A bar- rage of criticism issued today from' stalwart Democrats against the pro- posal of Chariman Raskob of thel national committee that the party adopt a platform calling for state control of liquor. The proposal, made yesterday at a meeting of the committee, stirred up instant opposition. The attack was carried on today in a series of bristling state-l ments., GLI T T ERING 'RADIO CITY' WITHIN Ri D CITY IS SCH EME OF ROCKEFE LLE R IIiIiLIUIIWU Titanic Development to Cover the designers call the "New York Three City Blocks; Cost style." There will be a central plaza i UI dotted with splashing fountains $250,000,000' and bristling shrubbery. There will11IPVIEV T iM BEAL NOMINATED FOR POST AGAIN Wy Associated Press> NEW YORK, March 6.-A glitter- ing city within a city; a titanic de- velopment covering three square blocks; the birth of a new archi- tecture; a wedding of radio, t1he stage and business -such is the $250,000,000 project of John D. Rockefeller, Jr. As a plaster model of "Radioi City" revolved under a spotlight Thursday, the first definite plans for its construction were announc- ed. Work will start in June on a mid-town site bounded by Fifth avenue, Sixth avenue, Forty-eighth street and Fifty-first street. The first units will be ready for occupancy in the fall of 1932, and the completed product is scheduled for 1934. S. L. Rotbafel (Roxy) will be the first "mayor." There will be nine separate build- ings, demanding 125,000 tons of structural steel and 28,000 windows. Their soaring walls and challeng- ing towers will be reared in what m----I~~-~ IAT i -I a .1 , S be shops ministering to every hu-g IIr IIl man need. E LIUI 111 Towering over all else will be the new home of the National Broad- casting Co., the largest man-made structuraever planned. Though not as tall as the Empire State building, its 68 stori; will contain 160,000C more feet, of floor space, 2,000,000 in all. On one side it will exhibit 675 feet of unbroken wall- on the other, it will present the appearance of an obelisk with a Gedge Asserts That Political Commentator Was Warned Over Telephone. SAYS HE TOOK CALL Unidentified Caller Threatened; to Take Buckley for Ride', H l 1C Senator Glass IVI HI fII J~l Democrat, V i r- ginia, contended prohibition w a s n ot a "p ar ty :__; question and as- serted "it would Favors Governor as Democratic be fatal for either Candidate for Presidential party to attempt I Nomination. to. make it one." __- At the sa m e B(iAssonriaed Jrss) time, S e n a t or .ANNAPOLIS, Md., March 6.--A Sheppard, Demo- resolution endorsing Governor Al- crat, Texas, co- E GL.. bert C. Ritchie for the Democratic author of thepro- nomination for president was ap- hibition amendment, appeared for proved today by the state senate, all Democrats, wet and dry, to unite and almost immediately the gover- in' a movement to defeat Raskob's nor's record became a matter of suggestion. state politics. Robinson Stresses Important Issues. Galen L. Tait, chairman of the Senator Robinson, of Arkansas, Republican state central commit- the Democrat leader in the Senate tee, issued a statement in which and' 1928 vice-presidential candi- he declared "Mr. Ritchie's own date, contended "there is a great cherished reorganized administra- danger that in bringing forward tion in Maryland is a flagrant ex- now the subject of prohibition ample of that over-centralization even more important issues may in government from which he di- be neglceanverts attention by alleging its ex- His colleague, Senator Caraway, charged that Raskob was "lined istence in the federal government." up on economics issues, "with the T h e legislative resolution, ap- extreme standpat portion of the proved yesterday by the issue of Republicandparty" and that the na- delegates, called Governor Ritchie, t i o n a 1 chairman's discussion of long and outspoken foe of the Eigh- those issues at yesterday's stormy teenth Amendment, "a champion meeting showed he was "utterly out of the rights of free people and of sympathy with the aims and as- free states in a free country," and pirations of the Democratic party." an opponent of "over-centraliza- Wheeler Also Criticizes. tion of power in the federal govern- The economic views of Raskob ment and federal invasion of the also were criticised by Senator rights of the state." Wheelcr, Democrat, Montana, who The vote in the senate was 19 to said he thought it would be impos- 1, the lone ballot against adoption 'f touch of Egyptian or Saracen lines. j 'W J.Jiares. It .will house 30 broadcasting stu- dios, equipped to handle television DET y /Asociatcd Press) as it is perfected. DETROIT, March 6.-A "v o i c e Flanking the center building will from headquarters" threatened over be two office skyscrapers, 45 stories the telephone that Jerry Buckley in height and identical in design. would be "taken for the ride" if On the ground floor of one will belicotnehscradfrte the R.K.O. vaudeville theater and he continued his crusade for the in the other the R.K.O. motion pic- recall of Mayor Charles Bowles, it ture theater. Completing the en- was testified today in the trial of semble will be an oval building, Ted Pizzino, Angelo Livecchi, and 14 stories high and contrasting in Joe Bommarito, for the murder of its rounded symmetry with thL the radiio political commentator sharp angles and sheer walls over- last July 23. shadowing it. The testimony was given by W. Space for the most complete Wright Gedge, manager of Radio opera house in the world has been station WMBC, over which Buckley reserved. Originally included in carried on his radio campaign a- the plans, the Metropolitan Opera gainst vice, for a "square deal" for Co. tentatively withdrew in dis- the unemployed and against the agreement over details. A final de- Bowles administration during the, cision awaits the return to the city latter weeks of the recall campaign. of R. Fulton Cutting, chairman of Threat Telephoned. the board. Gedge said the threat was tele- phoned to the station on July 181 and that he took the call.! 'IST CKS Fg[ ST "This is the voice of headquar- ters speaking," he quoted the un- INdentifled caller as saying. "Tell Buckley that if he talks about theI IIrecalltonight*he will be taken for theMride and it will be a long one." He relayed the message to Buck- Prices Close $1 to $17 Lower ley, Gedge said, but Buckley made in Largest Turnover the speech he had prepared. of, Week. Advised Tempering Attacks. The manager said he frequentlyI had requested Buckley to temper (ly Associated 1n5)NEW his attacks on the administration. YORK, Mar. 6.--h bears Buckley would agree to "lay off," fastened their claws on the stock he said, but always went back to market today and took additionalhiolwasfspkng, bites out of the February recover.dp In a turnover of 3,000,000 shares, Hitherto unrevealed d e t a i ls of the largest of the week, prices IBuckley's connection with station closed $1 to $17 lower, although the WMBC were disclosed by Gedge. average was $3. Buckley was never paid by the sta- Oils, depressed by news of addi- tion, he said, nor was he charged tional price cuts in both gasoline for the time he was on the air. He and crude, were sold freely, espe- said Buckley sold time on the air cialy Standard of New Jeisey, which and, during the recall campaign, made a new low for-1931. arranged for broadcasts of addres- Coincidentally, came the an- ses by John Gillespie, city commis- nouncement the general education sioner, a n d manager of Mayor board, sponsored by the Rockefel- Bowles' campaign, and by Robert lers, had disposed of 285,630 shares Oakland, vitriolic opponent of the of tis prominent issue in the fiscal administration. Buckley, G e d g e year ended June 30 last,. Jersey said, received about $1,000 in com- ad been the board's largest invest- mission from those contracts. na ent. ThursdTy's late buying movement r vras continued in the early tradin g w hen the utilities were strong, but .01N the market faltered in the after- noon as selling of the oil started. I United Corporation, Morgan-Bon- bright utility issue, alter rallying - im the mor'ning under large buying orders, turned emphatically down- Completion of Ten Year Plan ward in heavy trading and closed by Next Year Is Hope of Government.f Worrell Will Address (ByAss o'irt re s) i Junius E. Beal, Regent of the University from' Ann Arbor, who was renominated for that post yesterday at the Re- publican State convention follow- ing a brilliant maneuver which blocked an attempt by a faction headed by former Governor Fred Green to defeat him. FARM BOARD HEAD NAMED BY HOO~ER~ James Stone Appointed to Post Upon Resignation of Alexander Legge. (iy Associatca Press) WASHINGTON, March 6.-Pres- ident Hoover today accepted the resignation of Alexander Legg of Chicago, as chairman of the federal farm board, and appointed James C. Stone, of Kentucky, to succeed him. In making the announcement, President Hoover said he knew, he reflected "the view of the agricul- tural community when I express inten se regret upon the retirement of Mr. Legg." IThe vacancy, President Hoover said, created by the elevation of Stone to the chairmanship will not be filled for two or three weeks. "Chairman Legg has been urged by every farm organization in the ( United States to continue h i s work," the president said, "and I have urged him with all the force I could command. He, however, feels that he must go back to his business." The retiring farm board chair - man came into office nearly two years ago and has been a storm' center since the Hoover agricultural policy was put into operation. On numerous occasions he has become involved in controversies. In a statement at the farm board about the time the president named his successor, Legge e x p r e s s e d; "greater conficence in the ultimate1 success of the agricultural market- ing act than when he undertook the work." Marksman Fined $31 for Shooting Air Gun (/ A ia d , FACTION DEMANDING REMOVAL OF BEAL AS REGENT BLOCKED AT REPUBLICAN STATE MEET Strategical Maneuver Overturns Well - Laid Plans of Powerful Group; Disputes on Procedure Seen. (By Associated Press) KALAMAZOO, Mar. 6.-A strategical maneuver overturned well-laid plans of organization which had the voting strength re- quired to control the Republican state convention here today. Factions led by Former Governor Fred W. Green, Howard C. Lawrence, chairman of the state central committee, Edward N. Barnard, leader of the Wayne delegation, John Gillespie, Wayne county chairman, Frank D. McKay, former state treasurer, William McKieghan, of Flint, and others agreed to nominate Donald E. Johnson, of Flint, for regent of the University to succeed Junius E. Beal of Ann Arbor. The votes and success appeared certain. ----------- -When time came for nomina- City Jail Worth $2 tions to be offered, however, Paul Woodworth, temporary chairman, to longe Junk Man I said to have been the administra- tion choice, ruled the proceedings (]i Asscciatd Press) with an iron hand. The name of IGNIA, Mar. 6.-The city jail, Beal was offered. William Wallace, or all that was saleable, has been of Saginaw, moved the rules be sold to a junk man for $2.fs a a d thanrus The two-cell building, in dis- suspended and and a unanimous use for more than 20 years, was ballot be cast for the Regent. dismantled and the iron bars Woodworth accepted the motion were sold as scrap. The wood is and declared it carried. Roars of being converted into kindling. protest arose from McKieghan and City prisoners since the jail others but the temporary chairman was abandoned have been housed was adamant. The result was John- in the county jail. son's name never got before the convention, although his backers claimed they had a majority of the votes sewed up. Legal Tangle Possible. BBUILDINP eal was announced by the chair as the nominee. A legal tangle may result. Friends claim the chair was FOR STOR FALout of order in barring further nominations. Another dispute developed when Manager of Fire-Swept Concern nominations for the state board of Holds up Repair Until agriculture were made. Mrs. Pora After Adjustments. El. Stockman, incumbent, was snow- d under by Mrs. Alfred G. Wilson, of Birmingham. The names of A. Plans for rebuilding the F. *W. J. Rogers, of Beulah,' and Gilbert Woolworth company store, which Daane, of Grand Rapids, were was swept by fire Thursday morn- Ml'ered as successors to L. Whitney ing, will be halted temporarily, Watkins, of Manchester. A roll call John F. Spetter, manager, said last followed and the vote was close. night. Until adjustments are made, The chairman announced Daane no announcement of future plans won the nomination by a vote of will be given out, he said. 58to 505. Later the secretary G. S. Chubb, owner of an apart- 75.Lcked the ballots and announced ment at 210 S. Thayer street which thecket vot ad oger was partially damaged by fir the correct vote was 75 for Rogers Thursday noon, said that the struc- against 678 for Daane. The conven- ture would be rebuilt at once. tion then had adjourned. Tellers Meanwhile, more than a score of and convention officials said they insurance adjusters were busy yes- would certify Rogers as the winner. terday, conferring with officials in Backers of Daane claimed they an effort to estimate the actual would protest. They said there was damage, opportunity to change the vote, Three other stores, the B. E. and insisted the announced nom- Muehlig store, the E. F. Mills com- ination of Daane should stand. pany, and the William Goodyear Pearce Re-nominated. company store, suffered heavy loss- Aside from the rows of the re- es. The Muehlig store opened a ;ency and the nomination for the usual Thursday morning. The Good-. 3tate board of agriculture, the con- year store did not reopen, since i vention was monotonously har- is expected to be closed for at least monious. a week. Plans for expansion were Webster H Pearce was renomin- immediately suspended. ited for superintendent of public Estimated damage caused by the instruction without any opposition, fire was said by those in charge of ralph Stone, of Detroit, for Uni- the four stores to be mounting fol- versity Regent, Frank P. Cody, of lowing an inventory of stock and Detroit, for the state board of edu- detailed inspections of the build- ration, and Henry M. Butzell and ings. Smoke and water caused huge Howard Wiest for supreme justices, losses. officials said ill without contest. J i t ( r + i. f7 i {i i 3 i sible for the party to accept them of the resolution being cast by a "particularly on trusts and mono- Republican, William N. Andrews, of polies." Dorchester county, though f o u r "I also disagree with his views on members of the Republican min- the power problem," he added. ority refrained from voting. The approval of the house yes- terday was registered by viva voce llSIvote, and no nay votes were re-, State Bulletincorded. "If I may ass'ume to interpret, the (y Associated tress) views of Maryland Republicans on Friday, March 6, 1931 the question of the support of Mr. -- -Ritchie, for the Democratic nomin- PONTIAC-The Oakland county ation for president," said Tait's grand jury investigating county af- statement, "I would observe that fairs today turned toward alleged we would certainly not favor for irregularities in connection with president a man whom we have op- the construction of the new Hazel posed four times for governor." Park high school. One jury official said today that the $500,000 spent on the building was "far too much." Grand jury investigators have seiz-T ed the school board's records for I examination. IIMA! ATR ESCANABA - E. . .Kingsford, UI 1Lii Ford representative in this terri- tory, announced today that a water Bids for front site is to be purchased by for his company at Gladstone, eight miles north of here. Although Kingsford declined to give details of the deal other than that the WASHI property is to be used for a new treasury ti industrial development, it is under- left for t1 stood there is a possibility that and certifz Ford blast furnaces and foundtries spring fin may be constructed. when the afternoon DETROIT - A committee of 15,isues ov representing a delegation of 2,00)0iandea hal depositors in several Polish private a hal banks who marched to the city hall The lon today, asked Mayor Frank Murphy bidders. to help them regain losses of about was sough $3,000,000. The committee sugg: st- of 12-yea ed to the mayor that the city take 2Offers we over the property owned by the i per cen banks and sell it to remunerate the ndebtedn depositors. ury accept The pro 1ZTVTAom . 'nnrl haf.i nay off $1 ILUWVV im I L Certificates and Bonds Financing Program Turned Down. ( y 11 s'i~ W el I'r"'? 4GTON, March 6. The urned down bids right and he $1,400,000,000 of bonds icates being issued in the ancing program. In all, books closed Wednesday the treasury found its er-subscribed about two f times. gest paper had the most Four times the amount t on the $500,000,000 issue r, 3 3-8 per cent bonds. re double on the one-year t issue of certificates of ess, on which the treas- ed about $600,000,000. oceeds are to be used to l,09,000,000 and five-year' Sunday fu el ServiceI JI. William 11. Worrell, associate J:rofessor of Semitics, will address Shw weekly services of the B'nai Brith Hiliel foundation at 11:15 o'clock Sunday morning in the Michigan League chapel, in the plate of Rabbi Ber;nard Heller, who left last night for Chicago to occu- py the pulpit of Dr. Louis Mann of the University of Chicago. Wilbur Voliva 'Proves' Columbus Was Wrong NEW YORK, March 6.--Wilbur Glenn Voliva, owner and over-lord of the religious Zion City, Ill., pre- sented "proof" today that the earth is flat, Here it is: "If the earth were a globe, there would have to be 8 inches curva- ture in the first mile from any given point, 32 inches curvature in I two miles, ten and a half feet curv- ature in four miles. The curvature increases as a square of the dis- tance. In 400 miles the curva- ture would amount to 20.2 miles. "A ship (w train might be able to slide down such a hill, but can you imagine how you would ever get up the other side." Mr. Voliva is on his way back to WASHINGTON, March 6. One result of the government's efforts appears now to be a completion of half the public building program five years ahead of time. Many buildings all over the coun- try will be finished by the end of 1932. The remainder of the programI as now drawn is intended to care for every need of the next ten years. Besides the $341,000,000 alreadyl appropriated or authorized for post- offices, courthouses and other fed- eral buildings, the latest allocation proposed distribution of $155,000,- 000 all over the country, much of it to cities which did not know they were on the list. The allocation, reported to con- gress just before adjournment by the treasury-postoffice interdepart- mental committee, is subject to ex- tensive revision, however, before appropriations are asked. Some of the cities omn thelist were selected to meet the manda- tory requirement of at least five new buildings in each state. Others were chosen because their postal. receipts surpassed $20,000 a year during 1929 and 1930. Greet Players to Give Two More Plays Today Two more performances will be Ly :ssoce/Itl L'"{J.C 419s , V 1 dt? G . CHICAGO, March 6. -- The costs- - of the correspondence c o u r s e s Lindbergh to Attempt Beardsley Sperry took in marks- manship were up today. NewAiSpeedRecord Judge Daniel Trude added to them by fining Beardsley $31 for (y Associated Presa turning Michigan Ave. into an ani- BUe BANK, mak arh 6--Witt mated shooting gallery, one speed mark already to the credit of its sister ship, a swift Two detectiYes who were puzzled monoplane which may assault oth- at the sight of women leaping into er air records, waited in a hangar the air found the explanation in here today for Col. Charles A. Lind- Beardsley's air gun, with which he bergh. was getting a little practical ex- Embodying a combined retract- perience, from a room above the able landing gear-streamlining fea- street. ture that is the product of Lind- "What," asked the judge, "was bergh's brain, a trim Lockhee. the idea?" Sirius plane proved its met tlc "Just getting in some practlce," Thursday in the first long t e s I said Beardsley. "It was more fun flight since the Lindbergh idea wa. than a barrel of monkeys." adopted. THIRD PARTY WILL ONLY MUDDLE ENGLISH POLITICS, SAYS POLLOCK Mosley's Leadership Brilliant }complish. But I think of their Rather Than Sound, Is movement the same as I do about Professor's Opinion. a third-party movement in the _United States-namely that it is An opinion that the party situa- ill-conceived. The only thing they tion in Great Britain is "badly will be able to accomplish in the muddled" and that continued ac- immediate present is to m a k e tivities of the third party will onlyIthings more difficult for Ramsey I ,t cIi DESIRED BY GANDHI1 Fruce Between Leader, Viceroy Not to Halt Move Toward Independence. (By Associated Press) NEW DELHI, India, March 6.- ,omplete independence--what the Endian calls "purna swaraj"-is vlahatma Gandhi's goal in his deal- ngs with Great Britain, he told -ewspaper correspondents today. nis plans for complete self-gov- rnment with "disciplined rule from vithin" makes it possible for India o remain within the British Em- jirP, he said, "but our partnership with England must be on terms of ibsolute equality." "Some of my associates believe British statesmen Will never recon- 'ile themselves to absolute equality for India," he said. "I may be a visionary but I hold differently. I see the day when New Delhi and not Downing St., will be the center of the Tndian nation serve to muddle it further was voic-j MacDonald and muddle further theI