ESTABLISHED 1890 I Ahr M4 a t AIL AL MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN VOL. XLI. No. 113 EIGHT PAGES ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 11, 1931- PRICE FIVE CENTS REPUBLICAN PRTYF OUTLINED BY FESSI i J 4 I National Committee to Acquaint Country With Achievements of Hoover Regime. BURKE GIVES STATEMENTI Agriculture Advisory Council Attacked by Democrats, G.O.P. Independents. (By Associated Press) WASHINGTON, M a r c h 9.-The machinery of the Republican na- tiona1 committee will soon be thrown into high gear in an effort to acquaint the country with the work of the Hoover administration. Plans looking toward 1932 were outlined today by Chairman F e s s, after a call at the White House. He said, however, he would not go over the program with President Hoover until later. A little la t e r, J a m e s Francis Burke, general counsel of t h e -committee, issued a statement say- IMEOQNFES' ing it would not meet soon because the country "is suffering of an overdose of politics."- it e i r . t e a n 0 n RADIO CORPORATION REPORT SHOWS TELEVISION NOT READY FOR MARKET Indicates More Development Is separate service of nation-wide Needed Before Receivers broadcasting. Are Put on Sale "It is felt that in the practical *P sense of the term, television must (Ps Associated Press) develop to the stage where broad- NEW YORK, Mar. 10.-Television casting stations will be able to NEW ORKMar.10.-elevsionbroadcftst regularly visual objects has been "brought definitely, nearer in the studio, or scenes occurring commercial application," but no at- at other places through remote con- tempt will be made to market radio trol where reception devices shall receiving equipment this year, the be developed that will make these Radio Corporation of America scat- objects and scenes clearly discern- ei its annual report today."- ible in millions of homes; where The report said "further research such devices can be built upon a and development must precede the puc iesanlei teupota manufacture and sale to the public pingadiscswileliminate roary >f television sets. scnning iscdh- "Television has been brought nearer toncrmnprcl-'id ICvUlonmf211 by the research and technical prog- ress made by your corporation dur- ing 1930," the report stated. "While television during the past two yeas has been repeatedly demonstrated by wire and wireless on a labora- tory basis, it has remained the con- viction of your corporation that further research and development must precede the manufacture and sale of television sets on a com- mercial basis. "In order that the American pub- lic might not be misled by purely experimental equipment and that a service comparable to sound broadcasting should be available in support of the new art, your corpor- ation has devoted its efforts to in- tensive research into those prob- lems, to the preparation of plant facilities and to the planning of studio arrangements whereby sight transmission could be installed as a Democrats Attack Lucas. Meanwhile, Democrats and inde- pendent Republicans assailed the announcement last night by Robert H. Lucas, executive director of the Republican na tiona1 committee, that, an advisory council for agri- culture had been formed to tell the farmera bwht; the administra- thin: had done for them. Se.nar Fess said the commkittee's plan called for more intensive pub- lictythe organization of sub-com- niltte, and the speeding up of, state'Republican organizations. Burke Criticizes Politics. Burke said too much politics was one of the worst maladies that can inflict a nation, particularly when it is struggling to recover from economic disorder. He added the national committee would not attempt to "usurp the functions of the national conven- tion in shaping political policies," and praised. President Hoover for his efforts to advance business re- covery. Stat Duietins (By As.. dated Pro~s) Tuesday, March 10, 1931 BAY CITY-J o h n Lenard and Francis Comtois, narrowly escaped death this morning when a truck belonging to Lenard in which they were riding slipped from the pier at Wenonah park and plunged into 15 feet of water. The men were working for the city hauling snow' and had just dumped a load into tho Saginaw river. DETROIT-One half of the fed- eral prohibition force here today began a two weeks course of in- struction in the fine points of crim- inal investigation as it pertains to the prohibition law, under the tu- telage of two Washingtor instruc- 1 tors. At the end of the two weeks, the instructors will move on to an- other city, returning here in about two months to offer the same in- struction to the other half of the force. NORTHVILLE-Harry S. German was president of this Wayne coun-l ty village today as a result of the1 election held yesterday.' German,i who resigned from the presidencyt of Northville Jan, 26, after charges c of misconduct in office werel brought against him, was re-elect-1 ed by a vote of 531 to 421 forl Charles J. Dolph, his opponent. GRAND HAVEN-Grand Trunk1 offices here announced today that car ferry service was continuing on# schedule. The storm that has lash- ed Lake Michigan for the last two . days has abated. ST I MSU9N AIDE DIES, T O J. P. Cotton, Undersecretary of State, Succumbs at Johns. Hopkins Hospital. { - --. soci r ess) BALTIMORE, Mar. 10. - Joseph PotterCott fi, who as under-secre- tary of state for nearly two years, gained a reputation for frank and direct diplomatic methods, died late today at John Hopkins hos- pital, where he had undergone two major operations in the last six weeks. Death came at 5:10 o'clock, afteri the administration of 'oxygen had failed to prolong his life. At his1 bedside were his wife and daughter, Isabel, and his New York law part- ner, Georges Franklin. Earlier in the day, Dr. Joey T. Boone, the White House physician, was a caller, and last night Secre- tary of State Henry L. Stimson, in- formed that his colleague was dying, visited him. Mr. Cotton was 55 years old. He, underwent an operation for spinall infection on Jan. 21 and on Feb. 165 his right eye was removed. The under-secretary' bore the chief burden of the state depart-' ment's work during the absence of2 Secretary Stimson at the London naval conference and his health failed last summer. In the fall he took a two months leave of absence, and had his tonsils removed, but this failed to restore him and he{ became a patient of Dr. Walter E. Dandy, the brain specialist, at John Hopkins, early this year. . PILOT UNINJUREDt IN FORCEDLANDING Capt. Ira Eaker Damages Plane as Trans-continental Flight Is Halted. (14y Associ cd /'ress) TOLU, Ky., March 10.-Captain1 Ira Eaker, noted Army flier, was1 forced down and damaged his plane1 near here today on a trans-contin-l ental flight. He escaped with min- or scratches, and after discoveringi he could not continue the flight, hurriedly set out for Cave-in Rock, Ill., to spend the night.1 Captain Eaker landed near the farm of Jack Thomas from where he telephoned a telegram to be sent to Long Island, N. Y., his des- tination on the flight that started from Long Beach, Cal., early today.1 At the farm it was said his plane stuck in the mud on landing and was badly broken up. He was said ; trois anU otner movaie parts an t where research has made possible tthe utilization of wave lengths fo sight transmission that would not - interfere with the use of the al- ready overcrowded c h a n n e 1 in space." , T F T S Ann Arbor Residents to Attend Banquet in Grand Ballroom of Book Cadillac Hotel. Many Ann Arbor residents will go to Detroit Friday to attend the banquet in the grand ballroom of the Book Cadillac hotel planned in honor of President Alexander G. Ruthven and Mrs. Ruthven by the University of Michigan club of De- troit. President Ruthven will speak on the campus highlights of 1931, Re- gent R. Perry Shorts of the Uni- versity will discuss "Faculty and Alumni," and .Charles F. Kettering, scientist and humorist, will ap- praise the universities under the searchlight of industry and com- mercial research. Frank Cody, presiding officer, will introduce a list of notables who have wired that they will attend. Among the honored guests are Frnk Murphy, mayor of Detroit; R6V. John R. MeNichols, pesident of the University of Detroit; Paul WV Voorhies, attorney general of Michigan; Regent James 0. Murfin of the University; and Dr. G. Carl Huber, national president of the University Alumni association.. A formal reception will precede the dinner. Following the program there will be an informal reception. Music will be furnished by sym- phonic ensemble consisting of seven members of the Detroit Symphony orchestra. Ypsilanti Track Star Recovers From Injiury Roger Arnett, Ypsilanti track star was greatly improved at University hospital today where he has been since Sunday following an auto- mobile accident between N il e s, Michigan, and South Bend, Indiana, on U.S.-31, Saturday morning. Ar- nett was driving with several friends to the Central Intercollegiate track' championship meet at Notre Dame scheduled for Saturday night when his car was forced off the road and into a deep snow bank where it overturned, injuring Arnett badly. The extent of the track star's in- juries were said yesterday to be two broken vertebrae, one of which may have to be removed. Doctors were certain that Arnett would never run again. He was considered one of the greatest track stars ever turned out at Michigan State Normal, hav- ing been a consistent winner at middle-distance races for the past two years. Rudy Vallee to Offer Campus Songs Tonight Special buses will leave from the Union at 6 o'clock tonight for the Michigan theatre, Detroit, where Rudy Vallee and his orchestra will present a special Michigan Night program consisting entirely of Uni- versity songs, Gayle Chaffin, '31M, announced yesterday. Reduced rates will prevail for all students who are planning to go by bus, Chaffin added. The group will arrive at the theatre in time' for the second performance of the bill and will leave for Ann Arbor immediately after the show. Hamaguchi RecoversI From Gunshot Wound (Rv ssocad .res C! e THREE WITNESSES OFFER TESTIMONY ON BUCKLEY CASE Prosecution Strengthens Chain of Incidents Around Death of Detroit Announcer. DEFENSE DELAYS TRIAL Asks Opportunity to Study Text of Radio Talks to be Used as State's Evidence. '(y Assocrated Press) DETROIT, March 10.-A woman, a -taxi driver and a truck driver took the stand in recorder's court, today to weld together a chain of' incidents which they said happened at about the time Gerald E. Buck- s ley was shot to death in the La- Salle hotel July 23. Had Triple Significance. Today's testimony at the trial of Ted Pizzino, Joe Bommarito, and I Angelo Livecchi, the three men in- dicted for the slaying, had a three- fold significance for the state's case. It mentioned Livecchi as the man seen to emerge from the Ade- laide street entrance of the hotel and beckoned to "a group of men standing nearby just before the shooting. It mentioned Joe Bom- marito as one of the men in this group and it brought out the facts that an automobile was stalled in Woodward avenue in such a way I as to block traffic just after the slaying. The day's testimony also men- tioned a small automobile which! was seen to shoot out of Adelaide street into Woodward avenue soon after the shooting stopped. The trial was adjourned until Friday morning to give the defense oppor- tunity to study Buckley's radio ad- dresses which the state intends to. offer in evidence. State's Witncsss Testify. Two of the state's list of "eye witnesses" appeared today. They were Gus Reno, a taxi driver, and Curtis Hook, a driver of a Detroit watching Livecchi summon three men into the LaSalle hotel from the Adelaide street entrance just be- fore the shooting occurred. Asked if he could identify any of these Free Press truck, Reno told of three men, Reno stepped from thel witness stand and placed his hand on the shoulder of Joe Bommarito. ONCoSS' mTOUR'i SOUTH POLE TRIP PLANNED BY BYRD Rear-Admiral Again to Attempt Exploration of Antarctic. (By Associated Press) MIAMI, Fla., March 10. - Rear- Admiral Richard Evelyn Byrd, aer- ial conqueror of polar waste-lands, is planning- another voyage toward the South Pole, he announced to- day. Byrd said no date had been set for the second voyage, but it will not be started until after scientists who accompanied him on his first exploration have completed their work. "There is a vast unexplored area on theotheraside of the South Pole about which nobody knows," he said. "It may be another continent, and I am eager to find out." Airplanes would be the mode of travel best suited to the trip, he said. MOSLEY EXPUNGED FR'OM LABOR ROLLS National Executives Term Move of Sir Oswald 'An Act of Gross Disloyalty'. (By Associated Press) I LONDON, March 10.-The name of Sir Oswald Mosley was expunged today from the rolls of the Labor' Associated Press Photo party, until latelytthe possessor of Gay. Henry H. Horton, his political affections. Administrator of Tennessee, who Terming his foundation last week declared he would fight to the bit- of a new political party, "an act of ter end to clear his administration gross disloyalty," national execu- of accusations brought out in a re- tives of the Labor party ousted by cent probe into state affairs. 'unanimous vote the 35-year-old _____msafai. member of the House of Commons who has sat in that body as an independent, a Conservative, and a Laborite. Sir Oswald, still abed with a cold which prevented his. presence at the formal inauguration of his own! party several days ago, vouched no comment in his expulsion from the Plans for Program of Annual Labor ranks, an action which was Razz-Test' Announced not unanticipated. His wife, LadyF Cynthia Mosley, h e r husband's by Russell. "right hand man" in the NewParty, had resigned from Labor's ranks a Tickets for the ninth annual, week ago. Gridiron banquet were placed on Mosley's New Party, which has sale today by Edward S. McKay, tariff reform as its main purpose '32, chairman of the sale and treas- and which sponsors a limited dic- urer of Sigma Delta Chi, profes- tatorship in British government by sional journalistic fraternity spon- an inner cabinet of half a dozen soring the event which is sched- ministers, was formed, its founder uled for April 8 at the Union. A said, for the rehabilitation of Brit- reduction in price from the $3 ain. 1charge which has been set in the GOVERNOR TO CLEAR FIGHTS PROBE ITECHNICAL ERROR IN I PUNISHMENT BILL 1HOET PSNG' JCPIA YES NEW SENATORS DACEY TO ATTACK B o y l e s Recommends Certification ofBill. (B Asociated Press) LANSING, Mar. 10.-A tech- nical error was discovered today in the capital punishment act signed by Governor Wilber M. Brucker which brought threats of litigation by opponents of the death penalty, in an effort to keep the question off the spring elec- tion ballots. Governor Brucker, in effect, signed an enrolled act that was not passed by the legislature.' The act provided that a person con- victed of murder be taken to Jack- son by the state police to await a Sreview of his conviction by the su- preme court. As it passed the legis- lature the bill provided that the sheriff transport the condemned person to the prison. Corrected Proof Rushed. The clerical force of the senate was busy tonight rushing a cor- rected proof to the printer for a new act which will be placed be- fore the governor for his signature. The action was taken on the ad- vice of Emerson R. Boyles, deputy attorney general, who recommend- ed that the governor sign a cor- rected act and that the secretary of state certify the amended docu- rne nt to the county clerks'of the state. lBric er i expected to sign the new bill Wednesday mornin. The technical charge, it was pointed out, has no bearing on the intent of the act. Governor Brucker did not have the legislative bill before him for comparison when he signed the act. Petition May be Filed. While the staff of Fred I. Chase, secretary of the senate, was rush- ing through a new enrolled act to the governor, opponents of the death penalty were planning an attack on the proposed procedure. Representative Vincent P. Dacey, of Detroit, who opposed the capital punishment bill in the legislature, said petition may be filed in the courts to restrain the secretary of ,sate or county clerks from placing the question on the ballots. He pointed out that the department of state cannot possibly certify the act 30 days before the election, as required by the general statute. Friends of the measure, however, claim the referendum clause which provides that the question be voted on at the Apr. 6 election, is suffi- cient within itself for placement on the ballot. Harry Riseman Sees Communistic Nation "Community ownership of prop- erty in America must come, wheth- it comes by revolution or by peace- ful re-organization," said Harry -Riseman, chairman of the Old Age Pension league, in a lecture last night. Riseman pointed out the disad- v-,ntages of the laboring classes caused by "low wages, old age, and unemployment," and contrasted the theories of socialism and commun- ism, After the lecture, an open discus- sion was held, Scholastic Deficiency Causes 205 to Leave Students dismissed last semester from the literary college because of low grades numbered 205, Prof. Wilbur Humphreys, assistant dean of the college, announced yester- day. Approximately half of the i number were freshmen, he said. A year ago 255 were asked to leave the Uniyersity because of low scholastic standing. Last spring 150 were placed on the "home list." r i Brucker Approves Act Not Passed by Solons. Publication Sold Out on First Appearance S e v e n hundred-fifty copies of The Diagonal, comprising the total' printing of the new publication !commenting upon campus topics, 'International Night' Comprises were sold before noon yesterday, Elaborate Series of A - the first day of the sale, Robert L. b cts; Sloss, '33L, editor, revealed last 50 Appear in Cast night. The first number of the magazine, More than 2,000 persons last night will not go into a second printing, attended the eighth annual Inter- Sloss said. Plans are now -,under national Night program, "The way for the second issue which is Cruise of the S. S. Cosmos," given scheduled to appear before the under the direction of the Cosmo- spring recess. politan club, foreign student organ-_ ization, in Hill auditorium. Mchiganensian The program was elaborate and' varied and included acts presented to be Redeemed Toda y by eight different nations and to- I taling more than 50 actors, several Pledge stubs for the 1931 Michi- of whom have distinguished them- ganensian will be redeemed at the selves in their fields. regular price until 5 o'clock today Among the presentations was the in the offices of the yearbook in German act, given by the German the Press building, it was stated club, under the direction of Prof. yesterday by George E. Hofmeister, J. A. C. Hildner, of the German '31, business manager. department, A large number of the stubs are The presentations also included still unredeemed, but the price will a program of Russian folk songs be raised after today, Hofmeisterj and dances by the famous Russian said,I l last eight years to $2.50 for the 1931 banquet has been made. Plans for the program were an- nounced yesterday by Joseph A. Russell, '31, general chairman for the banquet, and include skits bur- lesquing, campus events and per- sonages, a second all-campus movie, and short addresses by famous per- sonages in the University, the city, and in national life. Visiting jour- nalists will include editors from many of the foremost newspapers and magazines in the country. Invitations for the 1931 banquet will be isued by the end of the week, Harold Warren, Jr., '31, chair- man of invitations committee, said yesterday. The form of this year's invitations has not been divulged, but it is said that it will conform to the general theme of the grid- banquet concerning a recent cam- pus event. Hundreds of invitations will be sent to members of the fac- ulty, student body and residents outside Ann Arbor. BELGRADE SHAKE1 Jugo-Slavians Huddle in Tents as Countryside Is Again Stricken by Tremor. (by Associated IPress~) BELGRADE, Jugo-Slavia, March' 10.-Inhabitants of the windswept' c o u n t r y side where earthquakes brought death and terror during the week-end still huddled in the open under tents today as the ground twitched and shifted like a: restless giant,. The latest of the settling shifts, none of which caused major dam- age, came early this morning. Seis- mologists have warned that interior disintegration of the Greek moun- tains probably will bring major dis- Balalaika orchestra from Detroit, This group, with the other act pro- cured from Detroit, were obtained .through the International institute, at the head of which is Mrs. W. R. Alvord, Detroit clubwoman. Other acts were by the Mexican, Roumanian, Norwegian, Chinese, Japanese, and Filipino groups. Fuller Stresses Place of Debate in Schools Debate, bringing attention to the world's happenings, and giving op- portunity for discussion of import- ant controversial matters, is an important adjunct to the aca- demic world, said Richard C. Ful- Ruthven Will Discuss Mill Tax at Banquet President Alexander G. Ruthvenc will discuss the Mill tax at the an- nual banquet of the University of Michigan club of Ann Arbor which will be held Wednesday, March 18, at the Union. More than 150 members are ex- pected to attend the function, T. Hawley Tapping, general secretary of the Alumni association, predict- ed yesterday. Negotiations are be- ing made to secure an out-of-town speaker. Pag-e Prepares 'Primer'