ESTABLISHED 1890 ddWA4 v . 1111 MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN VOL. XLI. No. 124 EIGHT PAGES ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAi, TUESDAY, MARCH 24, 1931 PRICE FIVE CENTS SOCIALISTS STA R T DRIE FR EXTRA CONGESSSESSION Norman Thomas Confers With Watson and Longworth About Proposal. TO PETITION PRESIDENT Extra Congress Would Consider Problems of Economic Depression. WASHINGTON, Mar. 23.-(A')-A campaign for an extra session of Congress to deal with economic distress was inaugurated today at a conference of socialists, representa- tives of peace societies and other organizations. Delegates to the conference head- ed by Norman Thomas, former so- cialist candidate for president, con- ferred with Republican leader Wat- son of the Senate and. Speaker Longworth to ask them to request President Hoover to call a special session. Agree to Present Request. Both Watson and L o n g w o r t h agreed to present the request to the l president on his return from theo Caribbean. Watson, however, said l he was not con- vinced that the f situation required N an extra session and expressed the view b usi n e ss would revive bet- ter with Congress -;'" y adjourned. Speaker to Present Petition to Hoover PRISONER LEADS I RNEWED ATTACK ON PIZZINO ALIBI Buckley Murder Trial in Detroit Enters Fourth Week in Recorder's Court. MARVIN TELLS STORY Prosecution Tries to Establish Motive for Assassination of Announcer. iMlARQlUETTE MAN IQUESTIONS PIIOXY AT PARTY SESSION Myron J. Sherwood Claims Wire Sent by Wife to Central Meeting Was Faked. ASKS INVESTIGATION Saginaw Woman Offers Second Proxy in Behalf of Mrs. Sherwood. ENGLISH LABORA TO KILL ARTIFI Thomas Lumsden Announces Discovery of Possible' Cure for Disease. Nicholas Longworth, Speaker of the House of Repre- sentatives who conferred yesterday with N o r m a n Thomas, socialist leader, concerning an extra session of congress to deal with the prob- lems of the economic crisis. V IKING' SURVIVORS1 ON RESCUE VESSEL1 Photographing Plane Crashes on Horse Island; Pilot Is Uninjured. HORSE ISLAND, Mar. 23.-(IP)- Pilot Bob Fogg, who flew from Con- cord; N. H., to obtain photographs 'f the Viking disaster, crashed on Horse island today. The plane was amaged but neither Fogg nor his companion was seriously injured. Delegations a called on Sena Norris, Repub c a n, Nebras and Wheel Democrat, Mo tana, to urge ti EORGE WNOS' they and o t h leaders of ther cent progressive conference app to the country for an extra sessi Wi lMake Radio Appeal. Senator Wheeler agreed to ma a radio appeal, but said he did n think the progressives could infl ence President Hoover to. call Co gress into session. Plans were made for sending delegation to the White House wh President Hoover returns and f having members of Congress su mit periodical reports to the pre dent on conditions in their distric There was much difference opinion over what problems shoo be cited in the appeal for an ext session. It was generally agree that cc nomic concitions should be the N sis for the demand, but some of t delegates wanted to include vario international problems, such as t world court, recognition of Russ cancellation of war debts and ti Hawley-Smoot tariff bill on rel tions with other countries. State Bulletins (My Assoiated Press) Sunday, March 22, 1931 lso' tor, bli- ka, e r,; nr- hat er re- eal on. I 3 t c c DETROIT, Mar. 23.-(/4) ---The LANSING, Mar. 23.-(/P)--Like the Gerald E. Buckley murder trial en- Republican state convention which tered its fourth week in recorder's preceded it, the recent meeting of court today, featured by a renewed the party state central committee attack on the alibi of one of the today had an aftermath. three defendants and an attempt Letters were written to Howard by the prosecution to establish a C. Lawrence, chairman of the com- bythve poseution ro eabliuns amittee, John Leasia, secretary to motive for the radio announcer's Governor Brucker, and Represent/'.- assassination July 23. tive John F. Van Brocklin, of Mar- Francis E. Weinert, a convict in quette, .charging a proxy presented the Michigan state prison, testified in the committee meeting was fak- he had seen Ted Pizzino run from ed. The letters were signed by My- the LaSalle hotel, pistol in hand, a ron J. Sherwood, of Marquette, and few seconds after Buckley was shot the proxy in question was one of Ito death. two submitted on behalf of Mrs. Pizzino, who claims he was in Sherwood, a member of the com- New York at the time of the slay- I mittee. ing, is on trial with Angelo Livecchi f Adams Showed Telegram. and Joe Bommarito. When chairman Lawrence called Testifies Against Smith. !for proxies in the committee meet- Testi es Aatrl Smit ing last week, William Adams, as- Testimony that Norman D. Smith,'sistant egata-rso reputed supporter of Former Mayor> snat osergeant-at-arms of t h e Chares owls mt intheLa~llesenate, offered a telegram purport- Charles Bowles met in the LaSalle ing to be signed by Mrs. Sherwood, hotel with "his boys" on Jan. 20, authorizing him to east hervote. 1 9 3 0, and resentfully discussed l Ah second letter Catherine Eng- Buckley's radio attacks on organ- li.sh, of Saginaw, produced a tele- ized vice and crime was given by gram giving her the proxy. Law- George Marvin, a former investi- rence ruled the proxy held by Mrs. gator for the department of street English would be accepted as it railways.,gishwudb cetda t aitays. wvwas datedalater than the one offer- ,Smith is now a convict in the ed by Adams. federal penitentiary at Leaven- Asks Investigation. worth, Kan. The witness told of Sherwood, in his letters, alleged being admitted to Smith's suite in'the telegram offered by Adams was the hotel and of being introducedia "pure and simple forgery." He to Pizzino, Livecchi, "Black Lee" asked an investigation, asserting Cellura, a man named Meli, W od uch praclti must be halted to another known only as "Pete." purify politics. Cellura Wanted. I nvestigations of various sorts Cellura is wanted for the slaying w e r e properly launched. Leasia of George Collins and William Can- asked the manager of the tele- non, alleged narcotic peddlers, in graph office at Marquette to check front of the LaSalle hotel July 3. the telegram received by Adams. He "Pete" is said by the state to be received a report back that it was Peter Licavoli who was indicted filed by "an elderly couple," who with the three defendants for the were not Mr. and Mrs. Sherwood. Buckley slaying but who still is - missing. Marvin testified that Smith boasted of having directed effortsI by a certain group which resulted in $11,000 being raised for the' Bowles campaign fund. He also T ISLAND CAPITAL testified that Buckley's speeches against vice were mentioned and that "Pete" said Buckley should be( Hoover and Party Acclaimed on silenced. 90-Mile Journey Across , . ~ Porto Rico. By Howard W. Blakeslee (Associated Press Science Editor) NEW YORK, March 23.-Cancer tissue growing artificially in glass dishes is killed in a few minutes by a new serum developed in the cancer research laboratory of Lon- don hospital, England. Unlike other tumor remedies this serum is harmless to living tissues except cancer. These discoveries and their pos- sibilities for experimenting with cancer in man are told in the April issue of the American Jour- nal of Cancer by Thomas Lumsden, M.D., director of the London lab- oratory. The journal is edited by Dr. Francis Carter Wood of Colum- bia university. The serum comes from animals which have been inoculated with cancer. It is tested upon cells of cancer, of heart, kidney and other body tissues growing artificially outside of the living beings. A start has been made in testing it upon living animals, a few rats having been cured of cancer, and others made immune. "Animals," Dr. Lumsden says, "are capable of forming anti-bodies having a specificially lethal effect upon malignant tufnor cells of any EXPERTS TO SPEA Dr. Forsythe, Detroit Pastor, Professors Shepard, Levi to Talk Today. Arguments opposed to the cur- rent bill in the legislature provid- ing for capital punishment will be c nsidered by Rev. Eli J. Forsythe, of Detroit, Prof. Moritz Levi, of the French department, and Prof. John F. Shepard, of the psychology de- partment, in an address before a meeting at 4:15 o'clock today, in room 231, Angell hall. Dr. Forsythe is known in Detroit as a public speaker and a counsel- lor on the problems of life. His work in Detroit has consisted pri- marily of conducting a clinic in per- sonal efficiency, in the operation of which he has interviewed scores of men and women on various prob- lems of work and their relations' with their fellow men. Commenting on thestudent of' human affairs, an editorial in the1 Detroit Journal states: "He is an American. In speech,! manner and personality, he grips and holds." A recent magazine ar- ticle about him states: "Dr. Forsythe is one of the great- est students of character I have ev- er met. He knows the human heart and he knows human nature." Rev. Henry Lewis, of the Epis- copal church, will serve as chair- man of the meeting, which is be- ing held in view of the pending re- ferendum on the capital punish- ment bill. Liner Steams for Rio With Prince of Wales S. S. ALCANTARA, Mar. 23.-(/') -The Prince of Wales and Prince George spent long hours today sun- ning themselves on deck as the Alcantara steamed northward to- ward Rio de Janeiro. The liner will reach Santos, Port of Sau Palo, Tuesday, giving pas- sengers opportunity for a few hours ashore. The princes are taking their meals with the other pas- sengers just as they did on the pas- ward voyage from England. They to normal cells." x ke ST. JOHN'S, Newfoundland, Mar. not 23.-()- The last of the Viking Lu- survivors at Horse island were safe- ly aboard the steamer Sagona to- day, but the progress of the rescue' a ! craft toward St. John's depended en upon her ability to clear a path or, through a high ice barrier. A changing wind was regarded as a favorable factor in opening a ts. trail for the journey to St. John's of where Sir Richard Squires, prime ld minister of Newfoundland, has an- nounced an inquiry will be con- - dueLed into the explosion on the a~ Remo of eight men, six of he them inju d, from Horse island to us the Sagona unday brought to 118 he the number of survivors aboard the ia, steamer. Nine survivors are believed he on other rescue craft and two bod-. a- ies have been recovered. Varick Frissell and A. G. Penrod, American motion picture men, and 24 others are listed as missing. S~ - ~ , 8 .: DRY FINDS SERUM CIAL CANCER GERMS variety, but which are non-toxic left Montevideo Sunday. Whatever these protective anti- bodies are, human cancers also possess them, Dr. Lumsden reports. "Perhaps the most specificially anti-malignant of the sera tested is the anti-serum obtained from a sheep which has been repeatedly inoculated with human cancer and human breast tissue. When this anti-serum is applied to mouse cancer in vitro (in a glass dish) it kills them (the cancer cells) with- in five minutes." ci What the human protective prin- ciple can do for animals, the latter can do for humans. As an example Dr. Lumsden tells of inoculating a rabbit with mouse cancer and putting it in human breast cancer cells living in a glass dish. "It causes the death of these can- cer cells," says Dr. Lumsden. He warns that these experiments "should be regarded as giving only useful observations." AUTIANSDEFEND NEW CUSTOM PA0CT Vienna Proposes Breaking Down All European Trade Barriers. VIENNA, Mar. 23.-(/P)-Austria today answered protests against her proposed customs union with Ger- many with an invitation to other European countries to join in an abolition of customs barriers. A formal protest by diplomatic representatives of France, Italy and Czechoslovakia drew f r o m Dr. Johann Schober, foreign minister and vice-chancellor, the word that Germany and Austria had no in- tention of concluding any treaty which excluded the other powers. On the contrary, he said, both have invited any other European state-all European states-to join the projected customs union, so as gradually to extend it to embrace all European countries. He declared also that Austria felt more encouraged to embark on the customs arrangement with Ger- many since she was conscious that the plan had the approval both of Aristide Briand, French foreign' minister and author of an am- bitious pan-European scheme, and of the League of Nations. The protest of the three countries against the customs union project which they based on an allegation that the union would impair and compromise Austria's pledged inde- pendence, aroused considerable bit- ter feeling in this country. The comment was made that it had been logical to hope that any hon- est effort to overceyne the economic depression of Eu9,pean states, no matter by whom inaugurated, would receive encouragement. ----- T Will SPEAK AGAIN Dr. Gustave A. Blumenthal Will Discuss Ways of Reading 'Character. As a result of the interest aroused by his all-campus forum last Wed- nesday, Dr. Gustave A. Blumenthal, vocational guidince expert, has con- sented to deliver another lecture here at 8:00 o'clock tonight in the Upper room at Lane hall. Since his lecture last week, Dr. Blumenthal has been engaged at Lane hall continuously giving per- sonal interviews to students, fac- ulty members, and townspeople de- siring vocational guidance advice, Dr. Blumenthal tonight will ex- plain the methods by which he judges character. Noted the world over for his ability to judge people accurately at a glance, he uses a method which makes use of thej personal appearance, speech, shape1 of head, answers to a questionnaire and various other factors. According to the statement of Jule Ayres, '33, chairman of the forum committee of the Student Christian association, Dr. Blumen- thal's original intention was to make a three day stop in Ann Ar- bor: the results of exneriment. . STUDENTS SPEAK IN OPEN HEARING ON TAXI PRICES Make First Attempt in Years to Settle Question. W. B. REAPRESENT Alderman C. Freeman Conducts Public Hearing. For the first time since the pas- sage of the auto ban in 1927, a concentrated attempt was made to bring about a unification of taxicab rates in Ann Arbor when approximately 6o students, cab operators, and townspeople ap- peared at an open meeting of the city ordinance committee last night to voice their opinions re- garding a proposed change in the present scale of taxicab rates. Headed by Walter B. Rea, as- sistant to the Dean of Students, four students representing campus opinion on the subject gave voice o complaints and suggested arbi- oration of the cab rate situation be- 'ore the ordinance committee, rep- , resented by Aldermen C. C. Free- |nan, chairman, Edward E. Lucas, Walter C. Feldcamp, and Benjamin H. Graf. The students who spoke were Henry J. Merry, '31, Kasper H. ilalverson, '31, Le Verne H. Taylor, 3lEd, and George E. Hofmeister, '31. Reads City Ordinances. Alderman Freeman opened the :neeting by reading section 10 of ,he taxicab code of the city ordi- aances. According to this docu- :nent, under which all cabs are ,perating at t ar ingn a meter is peItttEd a fare of 35 ents for the first mile and 10 cents for every addition l one-half mile. Additional p a s s e n g e r a may be chargcd 25 cents each. If the cab is not operating with a meter, a dat charge of 3 cents per passen- ger may be exacted for a ride any- where within the city limits. Discussion between the studens present and C. J. Marsh, indepen- dent cab operator, Berle H. Walker, proprietor of the Ann Arbor taxk company, Harry A. McCain, pro- prietor of the Buick taxi service, and Jay D. McPherson, proprietor of Miac's taxi, revealed that with -he exception of McPherson the ,arger operators in the city favor ,he use of meters, while the inde- pendent operators and those oper- ating smaller cabs are in opposi- (ion to them. Tentative Compromise Reached. A tentative compromise between the two factions was reached short- iy before .the close, of the meeting when the students present signified a willingness to concurr in the sug- gestion of Walker to accept a pro- posal to equip all cabs with meters at the rate of 25 cents for the first one-half mile and 10 cents for each additional half mile, and no charge for extra passengers. Pea spoke at some length, indi- cating that the student body was not necesarily in favor of meteis, but rather of any equitable ar- rangement for the unification of cab rates, Alderman Freeman closed the meeting without taking any official action.gHe indicated th the com- : mittee would act on the question shortly. ESCANABA- R u s s e 1 Pirlot, 8, O died today of injuries received last Friday when he was struck by an T OU IG ' L1 automobile while playing ball on aI highway. Prisoner Moran Describes State OWOSSO-An elevator at Coch- Board as Being Rotten southeast of here, was destroyed to Core,' by fire Sunday night, with a loss estimated at $25,000. The elevator JOLIET, Mar. 23.-(A')-A convict was the property of Floyd Lott.-f serving time for bank robbery told ALGONAC-TheCanadian side of la legislative committee investigat- te St. Clair river here tonight was ing the twin Joliet prisons today choked by an ice jam rising in somerol that he had paid $2,000 for a pa- spots to some 30 or 40 feet above Yefrom an undeserved sentence. the water line. The ice, which mov- freehYet w months after he was set ed down from Marine City, has e he was rearrested and return- backed over a large area. I ed to a cell, Joseph D. Moran said. Speaking under a pledge of legis- GLADSTONE-City Manager F. lative protection, Moran whirled in H. Beuchner today issued a warn- the witness chair, pointed to mem- ing to unemployed that it would be bers of the state parole board and useless for them to come here ex- said, "You're the cause of all this pecting to get work in the new trouble in the prison." Ford industriacldevelopment recent- "Rotten to the core" he said of ly announced for Gladstone. He all pardon andeparole boards since said that no construction work had 1918 when he came here. "For 12 been started yet and that when it 1 years I served time here for a crime did start local unemployed would they know I did not commit." be adequate to fill all needs. 'Ward Thompson, th e board ______member who died, sat there and DETROIT-Harriet Malach, nine- told me 'Joe, I know you didn't year-old daughter of Issac Malach, commit the crime you're charged was burned to death today in a with, but if you did time for all the fire which swept a six-family fiat crimes you are supposed to have on Alger avenue. Four other per- committed, you'd be here a long Vues recepts Nieeded to Order Caps, Gowns Senior engineers will not be al- lowed to order caps and gowns un- til they have paid their class dues, according to an announcement made yesterday by Howard Can- field, chairman of the caps and gowns committee of the engineer- ing college. Van Boven's, who are receiving the orders, have agreed not to accept any unless the re- ceipt for dues is presented. Since orders will not be taken later than April 10, the finance committee will collect dues at first opportunity. Details for collection will be decided at the class meet- ing at 9 o'clock this morning in room 348, West Engineering build- ing. Comamitte'e of Senate Holds Routine Session Members of the Senate's commit- tee on University affairs held a regular meeting at 4:15 o'clock yes- terday afternoon in room 2009 An- gell hall. Regular business was transacted and no measures were passed. Discussion of proposed ac- tion formed the bulb of the work accomplished. $700,000,000 Deficit Seen by Government WASHINGTON, Mar. 23.-(I')-A $700,000,000 treasury deficit at the end of the fiscal year on June 30 appeared probable tonight as in- come tax receipts continued to SAN JUAN, Porto Rico, Mar. 23.- (A)-President Hoover made his first visit to Porto Rico today, re- ceiving the acclaim of its people along a 90-mile route from Ponce to San Juan. The battleship Arizona, w i t h President Hoover and two members of his cabinet aboard, anchored outside Ponce harbor at 6 a. m. to- day, and began immediately to de- bark the president's party by motor boat to the quays here. 41 From Ponce, where Gov. Roose- velt and island officials and politi- cal leaders were assembled to meet Ohe president, the party went in a caravan of 23 automobiles across the island to San Juan, where Mr. Hoover planned to make an address in answer to his welcome. The president was the last to leave the Arizona., boats previously having taken the large company of newspaper men, photographers and others of the entourage, including Secretaries Hurley and W i lb u r, ashore, where a large crowd await- ed their coming. E 7 f - l l (a t A i S 1 TR 1 SCIENTISTS SAY THERE ARE ONLY 30 GENUINE REMBRANDTS EXTANT Dr. Maximilian Toch With Aid gan weeding out the imitations, of X-Rays Analyses Old the number was reduced to 600. With the development of the Masterpices. scientific processes the number has' I NE YOK, ar. 3.-/P)Dr.been reduced. NEW YORK, Mar. 23.-(P-Dr. Along two lines Dr. Toch pursues Maximilian Toch, whose avocation his examination of paintings. is detecting fake masterpieces with One is the principle that a paint- the aid of photography, X-ray and ter's brush stroke are, like his hand- chemistry, believes there are less w r i t i n g,characteristic-that he chemistry eieves erearen le cannot alter them himself, and that than 30 genuine Rembrandts in the they cannot be dUinlic~atedbhvan- Doctor Says Violet Rays Cause Spring Unrest, Not Fever Spring fever as an alibi is getting rather trite, so Dr. Maurice Mcar- vcy, of Health Service has thought up a new excuse for University stu- Sdents to write home about. lE ie blames it all on the ultra vio- let rays of the su.zDuLring the win- ter, it seems, the sun doesn't fur- Inish a generous amount of such rays. The cause, he says, is the sun's position below the equatorial belt, and the result is a decided .,