.ddL Air Ap lqpmpll ANIV t 31 4bo 01 P4 atl MEMBER ASSOCIATEDj PR ESS EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, MARCH 10, 1931 PRICE FIVE -CENTS HOOVER POCKETS FOUR MEASURES } MBY Associated Press) WASHINGTON, March 9.-Presi- dent Hoover today cleared his desk of bills sent him by the last Con- gress by giving four minor bills a pocket veto along with the Wag- I ner Unemployment bill. The Wagner bill went into the President's pocket Saturday, after he had issued a statement saying he could not sign it because, in providing for state employment a- gencies subsidized by the Federal Government, it completely wrecked the Department of Labor's employ- ment service. Two of the bills the President ve- toed today were minor claim meas- ures. The other two were bills pro- viding for changes in free mailing privileges and in the financial setupI covering village letter carriers. I POLITICAL DISPUTE1 :nnnnirn Tnl POi'fT IOWA PROBE BARES FINANCIAL RECURS OF ATHLETIC FUNDS Legislative Body Probes+ of Irregularities University. Charges in Appointment of Idahoan Insures, Consideration of Export Debenture Plan. (Byv Aesoriated Pre's) WASHINGTON, Mar. 9.-A strong indication that the export deben- ture farm relief plan would have a prominent place in the progressive conference here Wednesday and Thursday was given today with the selection of Senator Borah as chair- man, of a round table debate on: Regiments of men, machines and a genial sun together peeled away the sheet of ice and the drifts of a 16-inch snowstorm that had brought bane and boon alike to the people of the plain states. Aids Farmers. Boon to the farmers and town- folk, their fields thirsty after a summer drought and a snowless winter, their wells dry. Bane to the public utilities and the transporta- tion agencies, with power and light STORM WORTH MILLION (Ry Associated Press) EAST LANSING, March 9.-A million dollar blanket of snow draped the parched landscape of Michigan today. The heavy snowstorm that has been general throughout the state since Saturday night was given a .value of at least $1,000,- 000 to Michigan agricultum'p by Dewey A. Seeley, federal meteor- ologist at the East Lansing weather bureau. The snow con- tained an unusually high water content that more than half made up for the moisture defi- ciency for 1931. ines down, telephone poles levelled boulevards .and highways blocked, and trains delayed. ^ While no definite figures were available as to the benefits to agri- culture, the agriculturists believed that the benefits would far out- weigh the damage to p r o p e r t y.' Speaking for Southern Wisconsin alone, Prof. R. A. Moore of the agronomy department of University of Wisconsin said it would mean "hundreds of thousands of dollars to the future crop output.' 13 Deaths in Chicago Thirteen of the 16 deaths report- ed occurred in Chicago. Among the victims was an 18-year-old boy who waselectrocuted when he touched a high tension wire while sweeping snow from the top of a street car- the first job he had been able to ind in months. For a time. it was feared that four more deaths would be added to the list through the loss of four fishermen on Lakc Michigan on the tug Palmer, after being missing for more than 4C hours. State Bulletins (Bv Associated Press Monday, March 9, 1931 ! GRAND,. HAVEN-Grand Trunk car ferry Madison was safe in port here tonight after an 18-hour bat- tle with a blizzard on Lake Michi- gan. The vessel, which left Milwau- kee at 7:30 p. m. Sunday with 40 persons aboard, niade port here to- day at 1:45 p. m. No word was re- ceived from it until this morning when the coast guard station here said it had been sighted 75 miles off Manitowoc heading. for t h e Michigan shore. B A N G O R--T h e Miller opera house heres was destroyed by fire at 1 a. m. today. The blaze, which was caused by an overheated fur- nace, started after the building had been closed for the night. LANSING-Governor Brucker to- day appointed Dr. John Walsh of Escanaba to the state board of medicine to succeed Dr. William A. Lemire, deceased. The governor at the same time reappointed Major Albert Dunham to the board of managers of the Michigan Soldiers Home; reappointed D. A. Var Bus- kirk to the teachers retirement fiAn hnavd -and named .:osenh William E. Borah, Senator from Idaho, who was Selected chairman of a round table debate on agriculture in the pro- gressive conference to be held at Washington Wednesday and Thurs- day. Senator Borah considers the export debenture plan one of the major farm relief possibilities. NEW PHULICATION WILL APPEAR TODAY 'Diagonal' Will be Magazine of Critical Comment on Campus. Critical comments and views on campus institutions, traditions, and events are contained in the Diag- onal, newest under-graduate maga- zine, which will go on sale today at various places on campus, Robert L. Sloss, '33L, editor of the period- ical announced yesterday. The magazine especially features' the article "Muzzling The Daily's Guns," by George C. Tilley, '33L, in which the difficulties under which The Daily labors in .tiying to form a definite editorial policy are com- mented on. Another leading article is "Boiled in Oil," by Sloss. This article deals with the significance of the recent liquor raids. Also included in the. number is Prof. Arthur L. Cross' l 'The Case for the Graded Examin-' ation." Professor Cross is in the history department. CROSSON HOPS OFF! O'N RETURN FLIGHT, Airman Who Carried Antitoxin to Point Barrow Faces Into 25-Mile Gale. (By Associated Press) POINT BARROW, Alaska, March: I 11 let M I L 11 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 111 i I I agriculture. The five senatorial sponsors of u l n i iu uUI the conference, called to fomulate - a legislative program for the next Owosso Attorney Files Petition session of Congress, mapped out a to Compel Certification program at a meeting today and appointed chairmen on the five of A. J. Rogers. subjects around which discussionj will center. (By Associated Press) Borah Attends. LANSING, Mar. 9.- A political Although not a signer of the con- dispute that has gained momentum ference call, Senator Borah, Idaho ever since the gavel fell on the Republican, attended today's ses- Republican stateconvention in sion and was assigned to head the Kalamazoo last Friday landed in discussion on farm relief, the supreme court today. leader in the effort during the Seth Q. Pu:ver, Owosso attorney, last Congress to limit tariff revi- filed a petition asking a writ of sion to agriculture, Borah still is a mandamus to compel certification firm believer in the debenture plan. of A. J. Rogers, of Beulah, as the He feels that farm relief has been a nominee for the state board of failure and that the debenture, agriculture. The document was di- stricken from the tariff and farm rected against Howard C. Lawrence, marketing acts after P r e s i d e n t chairman of the Republican state H o v V e r took a vigorous stand central committee, and James G. against it, remains one of the most Frey, secretary. These party offi- important remedies. cers are charged with the duty of Norris To Preside. certifying to the county clerk the Senator, Norris, Republican, Ne- names which will appear upon the braska, chairman of the conference. ballots in the April 5 election. will preside over the discussions on Lack of a quorum prevented ac- public utilities. He will make the tion by the high court. Lawrence, address welcoming approximately Pulver and others appeared before 125 persons expected. the three justices who were here, but after brief arguments it wal FOREIGN LEGdecided to adjourn the hearing un- til Tuesday, when additional mem- SEES 100TH YEARI bers of the court are expected. I Whether the court will accept juris- (Ry Associated Press). diction or will rule that the actions SIDI-BEL-ABBAS, Algeria, Mar. 9 of political bodies are not subject -With sounds of marching and to review was in doubt.; revelry the men of the French For- Pulver's action fojiowed a sharp eign Legion made the desert ring division between Lawrence and today in celebration of a centennial. Frey as to whether Rogers or Gil- Ahundr ars ago, on March 9,1 bert L Dane, of Grand Rapids, BIG TEN ALLEGES GRAFT President Jessup Not Involved in Administration of Fund. (1'o aoeraRter rel DES MOINES, Iowa, Mar. 9.-The legislative committee investigating charges of maladministration of University of Iowa finances extend-, ed its inquiry today to the school's suspension from the Western Con- ference in 1929. Records of the alumni fund from which athletes were allowed to borrow, were bared by Willis Mer- cer, Iowa City business man, who administered the fund for five years. Maintenance of this fund was one of the Big Ten's charges against Iowa. Athletes Got Loans. Money was advancedsto athletes to pay tuition or to meet other needs, Mercer said, with the under- standing it was a loan and not a I gift. President Walter A. Jessup had nothing to do with the fund, Mer- cer said, adding that Jessup had refused consideration of a plan to be administered by a faculty- alumni committee. Mercer told the legislators he and Paul E. Belting, then athletic director, had worked out a faculty- alumni fund plan and had sub- mitted it to Jessup. Griffith Mentioned. Major John L. Griffith, commis- sioner of Western Conference ath- letics, was brought into the in- quiry by Mercer. After saying the alumni fund -may have contributed to Iowa's suspension, Mercer said: "The Big Ten never seemed to want to know much about the fund. I think it was run too honestly to suit them. I offered to talk to Major Griffith about it, but he did not seem to want to do so." Representative Byron A. Allen will go to Chicago tomorrow to take deposition from Major Griffith rela- tive to Iowa's ouster. SPANISH. INFANTA GIVEN OPERATION (By Associated Press) MADRID, March 9.-The Infanta Maria Cristina, second daughter and third child of King Alfonso, was operated upon today for ap- pendicitis by Dr. Gomez Ulla. All of the royal family and various government officials expressed sat- isfaction at what they said were happy results. It was understood that the operation was of the most delicate nature. WOLVES SHARE SECOND PLACE Michigan's basketball team clinched a tie for second place in conference honors last night at the field house by trouncing Chicago, 29 to 15. Every man on the Maize and Blue squad saw action during the game while three substitutes were used by the Maroons. Norm Daniels, captain-elect for the 1931-32 season, was high paint man for the evening with 10 points. Fish led the Maroons with 6 points. The cheerleader for next fall was announced between the halves. Jack Herbst, Detroit, was appointed to fill the shoes of R. Montgomery Shick. The assistant basketball man- agers for next fall were also an- nounced. They are: Fred Jones, D. Kelley, Howard Moged, and Art Berger. (See Pg. 6 for Complete Account) STUDENTS TO GIVE 'COSMOS, PROGRAM Annual International Night be Presented Tonight in Hill Auditorium. to I t 133, the Foreign Legion was found- ed by King Louis Phillipe. In Sidi-bel-Abbas, the first regi- ment passed in review to the blare, of bands and the tunes of the Le- gion's famous marching song. The short and stocky Colonel Rollet, his bright red whiskers, streaked with gray since he led his Legionnaires on the western front more than a dozen years ago, read the Legion's roll of honor. Men's E ducation Club should be certified as theconvn- I tion nominee. ANTI-SALOON GROUP, 'PREPARESFOR 1932 F. Scott McBride Predicts That Prohibition Will be Major Issue of Election. "The Cruise of the S. S. Cosmos," eighth annual International Night program, will be presented at 8:15 o'clock tonight in Hill auditorium, under the auspices of the Cosmo- politan club, foreign students or- ganization. The student acts presented by the various foreign student groups 4 on the campus will be supplemented by talent from Detroit, procured through the assistance of the In- ternational institute which is under the direction of Mrs..R. W. Alvord, Detroit clubwoman. The outside acts include a pro- gram of Russian folk-songs and melodies by the famous Russian *Balalaika orchestra from Detroit. In their many performances through- out the city and vicinity they have featured their interpretations of the Cossack songs and ballads. The other acts from Detroit are the Roumanian dancing troupe of six girls and two Mexican girls from the. Chalpultapec club who will dance the famous "Harabe" or hat dance of Mexico. The student presentations in- clude acts by the German club, the Chinese group, the Filipinos, the Japanese, Mexicans, and the Nor- wegians, represented by Madame Charles Koella, wife of Professor Koella, of the French department. The setting for the performance will be a representation of the looming prow of the S. S. Cosmos. the mythical steamship which will carry the travelers around the world. To either side of the boat will be street scenes, one from Spain and the other from India. A huge blue drape will hide the organ pipes in the background and give the effect of a blue sky behind the gigantic ship. The setting and con- tinuity were designed and written by Alan Handley, '32. The presentation has been di- rected by Ruth Ann Oakes, former assistant in the play production courses, and the arrangements have been under the direction of Wil- liam F. Jacobs, Grad., general chairman and treasurer of the Cosmopolitan club. BY TRUCEIN INDIA Gandhi-Irwin Accord Liberates Many Jailed During Civil Disobedience Move. (By Associated Press) NEW DELHI, India, March 9.- Thousands of political prisoners walked forth from the jails of India Sunday, free, as a result of the Gandhi-Irwin accord signed last week, arranging a truce in the civil disobedience campaign. The authorities announced that 3,000 of the 25,000 prisoners still, held at the time the accord was reached had been freed, and that 2,000 more would be released forth- with. Most of the first 3.000 to leave II -_., _ , - - - I - QUAKE KILLS 150 IN BALKAN STATE: MANY HOMELESS Communication Stops; Bridges, Railways Demolished. GREECE AFFECTED Serbian King Directs Work of Relieving Inhabitants. (Hy Associated Press) BELGRADE, Jugoslavia, Mar. 9.-With the dead unofficially reported at about 150, though some rumors placed the number much higher, the seriousness of earthquakes during the week-end in the region of the Jugo-Slav-. Bulgarian and Greek frontiers, began to be fully realized today. Communication with all the affected areas had not been re- established, but it was known that many villages had been devastated, hundreds of peasants made home- less and bridges and railways ruined. The suffering from cold and hunger was widespread. Lines Down. Relief work was handicapped by the breakdown of communication, and it was only with the greatest difficulty that food, medicine, and warm clothing were taken into re- gions where it was most needed. Shaken from their beds, and panic - stricken after Saturday morning's quakes, residents of the borderline country were afraid to to back to their homes until late Saturday. At 4 a. m. Sunday morn- ing they were routed into the open again, screaming and making for woods which afforded some shelter from the bitter weather without the danger of falling masonry. Bulgaria Is Center. The quakes, both Saturday and Sunday, extend from eastern Jugo- Slavia across Bulgaria to the shores )f the Black sea. The epicenter was near Drama, Bulgaria. The quakes were felt in Greece, where 70 houses .vere destroyed in the village of .avallion, and in eastern Thrace mnd Adrianople. PRICES OF INDIAN TRETOLECTURE Chinquilla, Lecturer, Actress, to Talk at Mendelssohn Theatre Thursday. Chinquilla, noted Indian lecturer and actress, will appear at 3:30 o'clock Thursday at the Lydia Men- ielssohn theatre, it was announced 7esterday. The topic of her lecture aas not yet been announced. . Popularly known as Princess Mhinquilia, she was born and brought up in a tepee on the west- 3rn plains, a pure-bloded American Indian. As daughter of the head thief of the Southern Cheyenne nation, Wi-cha-pa-gi-la-la (Lone Star), she soon left the prairie and under the care of the United States government, came for the first time into contact with civilization. Subsequently she graduated from ',;he famous Carlisle Indian school. Her early successes in recitals of Indian songs and dances brought ., into prominence as an ama- teur entertainer. For a few- years she toured both America and Aus- tralia, lecturing in her tribal re- galia. GANDHI CHEERED ON RETURN TRIP (By Associated Press) AHMADABAD, India, Mar. 9. - %ahatma Gandhi tonight reached the city whence a year ago he in- augurated his civil disobedience campaign, his triumphal 24-hour trip marked by continuous accla- mation from ecstatic throngs along the way who hailed him anew as the apostle of India's peace and liberty. At that time he left to declare war against India's British masters, vowing never to return until his ).-Joe Crosson, Alaska airman whol InformalMe tg brought much-needed antitoxin tos diphtheria-stricken patients here, Informal discussion of programs, was returning to Fairbanks today. of the recent meeting of the Na- Ie took off in the teeth of a 25- tional Education association was nile wind, a great handicap over held last night by the Men's Edu- .is snow and ice-covered route, cation club in their meeting in the Crosson said he would "stop at Union. Wainright to determine the quanti- Prof. Willard C. Olson, of the uy of aviation , gasoline available School of Education, gave a brief ,,here for use of two planes expected resume of a meeting of a group 'o bring more antitoxin here early interested in the problems of higher' Jhis week. He then will continue education. At this gathering, co- ,o Kotzeblue and Fairbanks. operation of research institution Gov. Parks has asked that two was urged in asking for money al.anes en route with a motion pic- from endowments, he said. ture outfit here take the remainder' ?f the serum requested by Dr. Hen- Alpha Nu Will Debate ry Griest, superintendent of Pres- . . byterian hospital of Point Barrow. Detroit Team Tonight Another case of diphtheria was AlpaN ilb ott h e discovered today. Five persons were batpha Nu will be host to the de- suffering from virulent attacks. baters of the Detroit Institute of Technnloyv in a d-at t 730 (By Associated Press)1 ST. PETERSBURG, Fla., March Riseman Will Speak 9.-The Anti-Saloon League, in an- nual convention here, today girded on Modern Socialism itself for another battle on behalf of Prohibition in the presidential Harry Riseman, chairman of the campaign of 1932, after hearing F. old age pension league, will speak Scott McBride, its general superin- at 8:15 o'clock tonight in Natural tendent, predict the dry law would Science auditorium under the aus- be a leading issue then. pices of the Round Table club and Denouncing the recently advanc-- the Michigan Socialists' club on ed plan of John J. Raskob, national Socialism of Our Times." Riseman chairman of the Democratic Party, replaces Clarence Senior, secretary for state control of liquor, McBride scheduledto e the address was charged last night that the propos- is unable to appear, because of ill- al was backed by "the multi-mil- ssau lionaires of the East." There will be no charge for the "They come forward now and tell lecture. the Southern States what they ure._ should do and offer states' rights," he said MenshevikZs Sentenced "To repeal prohibition is merely to Long Prison Term to encourage those fellows who are' enemies of the things we love. This (By Associated Press) is no time for us to haul down the MOSCOW, M a r c h 9.-Fourteen Stars and Stripes to black anarchy Mensheviks tried for treason today and lawlessness." were sentenced to prison for terms running to ten years. Edison Favors Severe Testing of Inventions Before Placing Them on American Market FULLER TO TALK ON ADELPHI CLUB "Adelphi as I Knew It" will be the topic of the talk that Richard C. Fuller, of the sociology depart-, ment, will deliver before the meet-' }ng of Adelphi tonight in the club room in Angell hall. Fuller was a member of Adelphi several years ago, once holding the office of treasurer. Tokio Crowds Burned by FallingChemicals gy*lil e a.u . U L *:o o'clock tonight in the society's room on the fourth floor of Angell hall. The question is "Resolved: that the several states should enact legislation providing for compul- sory unemployment insurance." Prof. Preston W. Slosson, of the history department, will preside. The meeting will be open to the public. Antwerp Police Find Women in Opium Den (By Associated Press) ANTWERP, Belgium, March 9.- Police here have discovered an opium den in which 31 Chinese and (By Associated Press) MIAMI BEACH, Mar. 9.-Thomas A. Edison today described drastic testing of American inventions prior to marketing and the pana- cea for a condition he said resulted from "half-cocked" sales methods. The 84-year-old inventor gave his expressed hope that a new inven- tion he inspected here this week- end would not be placed on the market before its details were per- fected to a high degree. The invention was a de-humidi- fier, placed in his bedroom of the Firestone estate Saturday night in II