now ESTABLISHED 1890 1, All Av 4ai1 MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN ---------- VOL. XLI. No. 117 EIGHT PAGES ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, MARCH 15, 1931 PRICE FIVE CENTS -- . 1 THREE REPORTERS OFFER TESTIMONY IN BUCKLEY TRIAL Reveal That Livecchi Was Seen in Hotel Both Before and Following Killing. DISCREPANCY IS FOUND State Gets Permission to Enter Six New Witnesses for Its Indictment. DETROIT, March 14. -UP)- An- nouncement of the discovery of six "new and vital" witnesses and the testimony of newspapermen who were in the LaSalle hotel early on the morning of July 23 featured to- day's session of the Gerald E. Buck- ley murder trial. In a two-hour session the state presented testimony from three re- porters on Detroit newspapers to the effect that Angelo Livecchi, one of the defendants, was seen in the hotel both before and after Buck- e ley was slain. The testimony also revealed a discrepancy from that given yesterday by Edward Rosen- berg, a state witness, as to just where Livecchi was when the shoot- ing started. Witnesses Total 129. Prosecutor Harry S. Toy asked and obtained permission to enter names of the new. witnesses in an indictment against Livecchi, Ted Pizzino, and Je Bommarito. The state's witness list now totals 129. The newspapermen who testified today were John Armstrong and Thomas McIntyre, of the Detroit News, and John Martin, of the De- troit Free Press. All said they had seen Livecchi in the hotel either just before or a short time after the slaying. Armstrong testified that he had reached the hotel at about 2:30 a.m. after learning of the shooting and that he saw Livecchi there. He said he asked the defendant where he was when "the fireworks start- ed" and Livecchi replied he was in the elevator with Elmer Jolly, house detective. Saw Livecchi in Lobby. Rosenberg testified yesterday that Livecchi was standing in a group near the cigar counter when the first shot was fired. Martin and McIntyre told of see- ing Livecchi in the hotel coffee shop a short time before the shoot- ing. They said he took a few sips of a cup of coffee and left. Martin told of seeing Livecchi standing at the cigar counter near the Adelaide street door about 10 minutes before the shooting. McIntyre failed to recall having seen him in the lobby. State Bulletins (By Associated Press) Saturday, March 14, 1931 DETROIT-Officials of the De- troit Veterans' Bureau office an- nounced today that payment of loans to Michigan veterans under the new soldiers bonus act has reached a total of more than $3,- 000,000. More than 47,000 applica- tions for loans on adjusted service certificates had been received at the office at the close of this week. The office is about eight weeks be- hind in the paymentof loans, the officials said. BAY CITY-The Eastern Michi- gan water carnival was incorpo-' rated today as a non-profit making association. Officers elected were Otto E. Sovereign, Bay City, presi- dent; T. J. Manson, Grayling, vice- president; Mrs. Laurie Budge, Bea- verton, secretary, and J. Wight Cooke, Bay City, treasurer. GRAND RAPIDS-Officials of the Devaux-Hall Motors corporation announced today that production of the new Devaux automobile at the Grand Rapids plant had been postponed until Apr. 1. Today had originally been set for the begin- ning of production. It was then put off until Mar. 23, because of delay in receiving equipment. JACKSON-What is believed to be one of the largest stills found in the-n Mirehizan waeied rin MAYOR CCUSED OF CLASS OFFICERS P1...!..CHOSEN B0SNIR James J. Walker, Mayor of New York city, who faces impending charges of indif- ference, negligence, and incompe- tence in his official duties. His po- litical foes plan to file accusation with the state next week. WALKER!S ENEMIES1 !WILL FILE CHARHGES City Affairs Board Prepares Act Against Indifferent' New York Mayor. to NEW YORK, Mar. 14.-(A)-As the result of a year's investigation, the city affairs committee will file, with Gov. Roosevelt next week charges of incompetence, neglect and indifference against Mayor Walker. John Haynes Holmes, chairman of the committee, a civilian body, said that Henry Rosner, research secretary, had quietly been assem- I bling the material on which the accusations will be based. Mr. Hol-' mes and Rabbi Stephen S. Wise, vice chairman, personally will pre- sent them. Under the state public office act, the governor may accept or reject the charges. If he accepts, he may investigate them himself or appoint a commissioner or the attorney general to act for him. If the charges are substantiated, he may remove the mayor. District Attorney Thomas C. T. Crain has made a move to combat accusations made against him by the. City club. He protested in a' letter to the governor the appoint- ment of Commissioner Samuel Sea- bury as his judge on the grounds that the latter is a member of the City club and already has criticized him on several occasions. TREASURY TO PAY OU0T RECORD SUMS Largest Financial Transactions Since World War to Take Place Tomorrow. WASHINGTON, Mar. 14.-(')- More than $3,000,000,000 will be re- ceived or expended by the Treasury on Monday in the largest govern- ment financial transaction since the World war. At that time $2,095,261,150 will be received and $1,139,000,000 paid out as the result of income tax receipts and the sale of bonds and certifi- cates of indebtedness to retire Treasury obligations. Payments for the first quarter of 1930 income taxes are due Mon- day, and Treasury officials expect- ed them tortotal $525,000,000. For the corresponding period last year the amount was $628,000,000. A re- duction this year is expected on ac- count of the business depression although the tax rate is one per cent larger than last year on per- sonal incomes. University Symphony Will Offer Program 'I Kasper Halverson Appointed as Permanent Secretary for I 1931 Graduates. PALMER STATES PLANS President of Senior Class Says Organization Will Aid Alumni Reunions. Permanent organization of the senior classes of the University was started yesterday with the appoint- ment of Kasper H. Halverson, '31, as the permanent secretary of the class of 1931, it was announced by - H. Bruce Palmer '31, president.mer, Plans are be- ing made to de- . velop definitely a class spirit in the seniors be f o r e graduation exer- cises in June, Pl crer stated. The permanent secre- Palmer tary in addition to handling all cor- respondence of the 1931 graduates, will arrange for all alumni reun- ions and banquets in the future, thereby serving as the medium be- tween the alumni association and the members of the class of '31. Dues Receipts Required. A concentrated drive over the three-day period, March 31, April 1, and 2, will be made to sell sub- scriptions to the Alumnus, publica- tion of the Alumni association, and to collect class dues. A substan- tial reduction in the price of the Alumnus f r o m that in p a s t years is expect- ed to result in' greatly increas- ed sales. D u e s and an Alumnus, subscription will be o ff e r e d to- gether for $3.50 instead of the Halverson ;5 charge in the past. Seniors will be asked for the class dues receipts when ordering caps and gowns, or invitations. Orders for caps and gowns may now be placed at Moe's or Van Boven's. To Appoint Honor Guard. Appointment of the Honor Guard of the senior classes will be made within the near future. The Guard will be composed only of men who have been outstanding on the cam- pus. While this body has officiated solely at the graduating ceremon- ies in years past, it is planned to have it serve as the nucleus of the present class insofar as senior cere- monies and activities from now un- til commencement, are concerned. II"It is only fair that all seniors should contribute equally to the defraying of the class expenses," Palmer stated when questioned a- bout the dues. "The dollar received from each graduating student, will be used to take care of the expenses connected with the senior activities, to pay for the Michiganensian pages, and to provide a permanent fund in Ann Arbor for the procur- ing of a suitable class memorial at a later date." The Weather Lower Michigan. - (A) - Mostly cloudy, somewhat colder, and pos- sibly snow flurries near Lake Mich- igan Sunday; Monday probably cloudy. Pi R eTEDCALIFORNIASwimmers Win Calls for Special NhIIOUUI PIIIUUILI Meeting of Senate EUAO OTL Big Ten Crown K* Members of the University SWIMMING Senate will meet at 4:15 o'clock 11 1HURCH TMichigan's powerful swimming tUmorroU afLernooI LLL tomorrow afternoon i room C, iteam smashed the Western Con- Law building, at the special re- ference record in winning the quest of President Alexander 1931 Big Ten championship at Grant Ruthven. Dr. Frank Rob- Dr. R. B. Kleinsmid, President of the Intramural building 1 a s t bins, assistant to the President, Western University, Will night before a record-breaking stated yesterday that the reasonr Address Methodists. rowd of 1,600 fans, scoring 57 for this special ga theringess ofhothes Convicts Wreck Prison governingboywsukwnt points. Iowa and Northwestern governing body was unknown to finished in a tie for second with Buildings in Hour him. Themeeting is not one of FISHER TO GIVE SERMON 20 points each. Minnesota was those scheduled during the scho- third with 16, Chicago fourth o. Anderson, Heaps, Smith, Morse, with 3, and Illinois tallied one Boesche, Hildner, Heller point for last place. Two con- OFFICERS WARNED Will SpeakHToday.f erence records went to the dis- Se Toycard when Meigs, Miller, and Kennedy swam the 300 yard Gunners, Police Guard dent of the University of Southern Marsh, Minnesota star, nosed out notene aryW a pek A J o D n n y Schmeiler, Michigan None Escape. TOdACTOyAR [S adto l pe in hn swimmer, in the 150 yard back- meeting of the First Methodist stroke, negotiating the distance JOLIET, Ill., Mar. 14.-(A/)P- Council Promises Consideration Episcopal church on "Internation- in 1:43. Four convicts were shot, one of Alleged Hell Week aism and Christian Ideals. WRESTLING fatally, as ,ioo rebellious prison- Occurrence. President Von Kleinsmid h a s Dougovito, M i c h i g a n's 165 ers in the old state penitentiary curec.made few appearances in the East p ound star, won a fall from Bag- today wrecked the prison shops, .iInr ecent years concerning the work naw, Wisconsin, in 11:35 to d a llrad the n in an Acton was promied Ilterastr he has been carrying on at the uni- score the Wolverine's lone vic- dougsha d kit council was promised last night by versiy, Cory in the Big Ten wrestling hour's mad rioting. oa Wzation, 31 president ofthe Dr. Fisher to Talk on 'Reality." neet at Chicago. Sigwart was Three of the prisoners were university students who walked in- At the morning service at the beaten by Aldrich, of Indiana in felled by sharp-shooting guards to the residence of Ernest E. Gwin- Methodist church, Dr. Frederick B. the 118 pound finals by a .time on the high, castellated wall, ntr 806 West Libert street Friday Fisher, pastor of the church, will of 3:11. Northwestern, with three picked off one by one as they at- night fully masked The students speak on "Reality." victories, topped the meet. tacked a group of prison guards were turned over to Chief of Polie "Living Christ," will be the sub- TRACK at the door of the dining hall. Thomas M. O'Brien and were given ject of Rev. Merle H. Anderson's Eddie Tolan's victory i the Captain B. A. Davenport suffered a hearing yesterday ning Cef sermon at the First Presbyterian. dash event at the Illinois Re- a broken arm and perhaps internal O'Brien resd t h morning. church this morning, and at the lays last night was the feature injuries. them in the custody of J. A. Burs- student's meeting in the evening of a successful Wolverine inva- The fourth convict wounded was iy, dean of students, for action by there will be a discussion of "The sion. Tolan, off to a bad start, struck by a richocheting bullet the University. ,[hehandicaUniversity of Michigan and the S. overcame the handicap by a fired into the air by cell house C. A.," led by Fenelon W. Boesche, brilliant burst of speed near the sentries to drive the recalcitrant The youths said they had two '31L president of the Student tape. presden of he tudet iprisoners into their individual cells. initiates locked in a house at 805 'Christianassociation.i FENCING Officials Were Ready. West Liberty street, and had en- CIn escon Michigan placed f o u r t h in tered the Gwinner home by mis- In the second of a series of Len- fencing at Champaign where the Warned by fermenting discontent take. Gwinner told the police that ten s e r m o n s, Rev. Allison Ray. Sig Ten meet was held last nightI during the last few weeks, the pri- they had walked in the front door ! Heaps, pastor of the First Congre- icoring 3 points. Illinois won the' son administration was ready for and started upstairs when he halt- gational church, will speak this meet with 15 points. the outbreak and within a few ed them. They told him that they morning on the subject, "On the GYMNASTICS moments after the alarm -as were in search of two initiates for Mountain" which will be a discus- Unexpected strength and good sounded from the dining hall the their fraternity who were in a room sion of Christ's vision. Ira M. Smith, performances enabled Michigan outer walls were manned by ma- on the second floor, but Gwinner, registrar of the University, will to place fifth in the Conference chine gunners and city and high- who was giving a bridge party for ,lead the. discussion at the student i gymnastics meet, won by Chi- way police surrounded the ancient Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Stein and meeting and will speak on 'Michi- cago with 1121 points, which stone prison on every side, armed Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Wall, did gan's Crime Problem." was held at Champaign last wit shotguns, rifles and revolvers. not believe their story and called Dr. Morse to Describe China, night. None of the prisoners was armed the police. Gwinner admitted yes- At the First Baptist church this 1 (Complete Sports on Pages 6-7) and there was no attempt made to terday that the students had said morning, Dr. W. R. Morse, dean of: -escape. nniiDeaths Caused Investigation. nothing which substantiated any the medical school of the West ITheoutbre was a seeto te suspicion that they were marau- China Union university, in Chen- ders. p gru, China, will describe some ofTR o fthe pisna tFe. his experiences in the oriental in- de22, intoman hembson galdseb. stitution. He will also lead the dis- T.uum 22 noanabs f urs h PRISON EXPERT cussion at the studentdmeeting~t- TAL S HE E O50 the death of a prisoner from a clot TO SPEAK HERni t hsdon the heart last week while he t. was in solitary confinement for in- At the Hillel foundation tonight i Lorch Announces Lecture Series subordination, shackled, as is the llexander Paterson, Englishman, Prof. J. A. C. Hildner, of the Ger- b Architect of Union customary punishment, with his to Talk on Social Aspects. man department, will lead an open wrists cuffed to the bars above his forum under the title "Side Glan-1 Women s League. I head. Alexander Paterson, British com- ces," while at the morning service After the latter incident, al- missioner of prisons and Great in the League chapel, Rabbi Ber- Irving K. Pond, internationally though a coroner's jury absolved Britain's representative on the in- nard Heller, director of the found- known architect from Chicago and prison officials of blame for the ternational prison commission, will ation, will speak on "Evolution and ex-president of the American In- death, the state legislature directed speak under the auspices of the so- Judaism." stitute of Architects will give a se- a committee to visit the peniten- ciology department on the subject, ries of four lectures during the per- tiary next week and make an in- "English Prisons Today," at 4:15 iod from March 19 to 27 under the vestigation. This action, Warden o'clock Wednesday, March 18, in usg fhArierIc- Hill said, led the convicts to believe u dnsdyMach18 nAT Al MAII le ePrsof hEiALrchithecaloflh room 1025, Angell hall. lege, Prof. Emil Lorch, head of the public sentiment was with them. Paterson s a graduate of Oxford Nschool, announced. Wreck Furniture. Pnatersnisaher adu paedofhOxokdyI Pond is the designer of oht e The mutiny broke out at noon. university, where he played hockey LE A E1I C IEUnion and League buildings as well Catcalls and shouts from the had the reputation of knowingdL as the new Press building now un- luncheon tables gave the signals of ha h rpttino koig ___der construction. He has receivedcotmtfrhegadante every tramp in the county. He spent rcontemptoforntheerguardsaandrthe his vacations in the poorest part of Postal Authorities Given New recougnio n internatioa arc- 1 100 convicts, refusing to march to Lndn n ing Schedules Adding 10,000 merous skyscrapers in New York, and then rushed into the open. and earning money by teaching the Miles to Total. Chicago, and other large cities. Warning shots fired from the walls idle sons of the rich and by writesgOn Thursday, March 19, he will sent them to cover, and 60 of the Durng th e World war he served WASHINGTON, Mar. 14-(P)-An deliver the first lecture, "Laying the leaders ran for the kitchen. as a fellow soldier and corporal air mail-passenger service, increas- Foundations of Architecture," in Leaving it thoroughly wrecked, with well-known criminals, living ed by 10,750 miles a day and placing which he will discuss what archi- they went on to the dining hall, I with them-onqualctrmns lingthe United States far ahead of all tecture has meant in all ages. The smashing furniture, tearing tables with them on European countries combined, was second lecture which is scheduled and chairs from the concrete floor announced by the post office de- for the following day is "Possibili- and hurling them through windows. Last Wendel Sister, partment for inauguration April 1. ties in American Expression." In Two fibre furniture shops were also Noted Heiress Dies With the new schedules will this talk, Pond will describe the demolished, and a fire was started come, for the first time, in the his- trend in America towards a new in a cell house but was put out. NEW YORK, Mar. 14.-(P)--Miss tory of aviation, a through air- American architecture. Ella V. von E. Wendel, last of the E mail-passenger service, with tri- "Psychology of Form," a discus- Wendel sisters who inherited the motorplanes, between Atlantic and sion of the human reaction to mass, vast fortune of John Gottlieb Wen-C Pacific coasts. 0et[ilULndCirecIinWoPEachiES S e h i n A short cut to South America, ture, will be the subject of his third del, died in her sleep Friday night. Ashr utoSuhA ri, lecture which will take place on She was 80 years old. with a direct Richmond, Va., to March 26. On the next day, Pond Raleigh, N C. Florence, S. C., and will deliver the fourth and last lec-ST BILLE ISLATION Jackoile, CFlorondtripC iadtMeArchi eOnthrenEduaiond" VTS REINSTA TED Savannah, Ga., with stops at those ture, "Architecture in Education." DRINKING CHARGES points, also will be provided. In this talk, he will treat architec- Leaders in Senate, House Fear Detroit and Chicago will be linked ture as a cultural study. Technical Slow-up, of calling for an investigation by the by four more round-trips daily, and HOOVER TO TAKE 399 Measures. enateriday nrut ficaliactt body Chicago and Cleveland will have CARIBBEAN TRIPS LANSING, Mar. 14.-(f)-A tech- postponed until tomorrow morning one more chance each day to go nical deadlock which is making the to allow yesterday's conference with calling on each other, and Chicago President Will Leave Next Week current legislature one of the slow- university officials and the students and Kansas City will have two est in years must be broken soon univsityocid more. for Porto Rican Visit. if the session is to end at its usual 3 MINNESOTA STUDEA AFTER LIQUOR Fifteen Suspended at St. Paul Are Taken Back by Senate and University Action. Associated Press dispatches from Minneapolis last night indicate that r, 1 all of the students suspended for Students at the farm school, in liquor drinking at the University which all of those held on liquor of Minnesota will be reinstated charges were enrolled, held a mass within a few days. Fifteen of the meeting yesterday and were re- 19 culprits had been received back ported to have been overwhelm- into the fold yesterday after action ingly in favor of supporting the of the state senate, meeting with s c h oo1 administration's original university officials. Action, at first stand on the matter. thought to be harsh, was reduced Further investigation of the following the meeting of the sena- liauor situation at Minnesota was Tickets for Ervine's Play to Go on Sale Tickets for Saint John Ervine's comedy, "The First Mrs. Fraser" starring Grace George which is scheduled for t w o performances next Monday at the Lydia Mendel- WASHINGTON, Mar. 14.-(P)-- President Hoover planned to. make several trips from Washington in the next few months, beginning with an ocean voyage to Porto Rico and the Virgin Islands next week. His 10-day visit to the Caribbean countries is intended to provide him with relaxation after the stren- time early in May, leaders declared today. It is claimed by house members that their bills are being held up in the senate and some senators think pet measures are being delayed in the house. The situation occurs every session, but this year it ap- pears to have retarded the activi- ties of the legislature more than