OTABLISHED 1890 Jr ta I mil MEBE EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN n== VOL. XLI. No. 139 EIGHT PAGES ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, APRIL 10, 1931 PRICE FIVE CENTS REPPORTIONMENT' ACT PASSES HOUSE: GOES TOGOVERNOR Bill Put Through Both Houses With Only Two Votes Cast Against It.I REPRESENTS COMPROMISE Passage Ends Boom of Speaker Frederick Ming's Run For Congress. LANSING, A p r i 9.-()-The Harding congressional reapportion-' ment bill sped through the house! today without a single vote of pro- test against its final passage in the legislature. The bill.was iaif on the Gover- nor's desk with the emphasis of an affirmative i'oll'call ih favor of the' measure in the lower branch. So popular was the Harding bill wibh the membership of the legislature comprised of several factions, that it was whipped through the two branches with only two dissenting votes. Senators George G. Sadow- ski, Detroit Democrat, and James Gordon Bonine, of Cassopolis, cast the only negative votes in the leg- islature on the bill. Governor Bruck- er is expected to sign the bill. Opposition Tumbles. All opposition to the measure tumbled when house leaders went into conferences last night that ex- tended well into the morning. Rep. Cleveland Sorenson, of Manistee, Who was prepared to offer an a- niendment delaying apportionment until 1933 and electing at large the four additional representatives for 1932 announced this morning that! attorneys had advised him that his plans were unconstitutional.I iep. Sorenson greeted the read- ing of the title with the motion Lhaithe bUel be considered read andk with a _ cond motion to attach the affrmative toll call. No opposition was raised to the motion and the Harding bill ended its legislative journey.I A.epresents Compromise. Passage of the bill also ended aj temporary boom for the candidacya of Speaker Fred R. Ming for Con- gress. Under the plan for election at large for 1932 as proposed Wed- nesday by Rep. Sorenson, Speaker Ming would have been an outstand- ing favorite for one of the four seats. The speaker, however, did not' seek the amendment and has re- peatedly stated he does not desire to run for Congress. The Harding bill represents a' compromise among the various leg-; islative factions on apportionment. It gives five seats exclusively to$ Wayne county and puts the Met- ropolitan area together with Oak- land in another district. Members of the Wayne delegation who had pressed for apportionment on a strictly population basis, were fin- ally appeased in the belief that the Harding bill gave the most popu- lous county in the state all that it could expect in the legislature. State Dulletins (By Associted Press) Thusday, April 9, 1931 MANISTEE-T h e will of Mrs. Meriam Kitzinger Kann, daughter of the late Judge Kitzinger, found- er of the Pere Marquette Steamship line, named Elizabeth Sara Kann,' 13, as principal heir to her mother's estate. The will was filed in pro- bate here. LANSING-The house today ap- proved on general orders the Cul- ver whipping post bill which pro-I vides a generous flogging for major crimes. At the same time Rep. Cul- LONG WORTH, SPEAKER OF HOUSE, DIES OF PNEUMONIA AFTER BRIEF ILLNESS MRS. OSBORN ASKS CITY TO CONTINUE WORK FOR BLESS City Council Pays Tribute to Outgoing Aldermen at Last Meeting. NEWKIRK IS HONORED Aldermen to Consider Taxicab Ordinance at Monday Session. - AVOWS FRENCH, ITALIAN ACCORD PNEUMONIA CLAIMS LONG WORTHf91WN ~ilgTRCR FOLLOWIN BRIANT RECORD ASVTERA LEDE OF USE Famous Representative Was in South Resting After Arduous Duties as Speaker of Recent Session. Meeting for the last time before the installation of the newly elected city officers next Monday, Ann Ar- bor's Common council last night paid tribute to three outgoing mem- bers of the body, President Dean W. Meyers, Alderman George Lutz. Alderman H. Wirt Newkirk, and Mayor Edward W. Staebler, and ex- tended congratulations to a new o.esident, A. L. McDonald, and to a new mayor, Ex-alderman H.' Wirt Newkirk. Pleading before the council for cntinuance of Mayor Staebler s > < unemployment committee, upon, i : Iwhich she has served as directorl : without pay since its establishment last November, Mrs. Jay M. Osborn pointed out that dropping the pro- .: -:ject at this time would mean re- " linquishing all that has been ac-t s G complished during the past four sand one-half months. In her report, cholas Longworth, speaker of the Mrs. Osborn stated that at present passed away at 10:49 o'clock yester- 1,111 unemployed, of whom 169 are ans sad a at 10:49 o'loystem - women have been classified by the ,inns said that it was only his amnaz- committee. ring the night and until his death. Staebler, Osborn $ear Expenses. n ill Monday. As yet there has been no city appropriation to the cause, the expensesLof which have been born r entirely by Mayor Staebler, and Mrs. AIKEN, S. C., Apr. 9.-(P)-Nicholas Longworth, speaker of the national house of representatives, died here at 10:49 a. m. today. Longworth's amazing vitality, physicians said, alone kept him alive during the night and until his death. He was taken ill Monday of pneumonia in one lung. At his bedside was his wife, the former Alice Roosevelt, daugh- ter of President Theodore Roosevelt, and his friend, Mrs. James F. Curtis, at whose home he was visiting when stricken. Gaston Doumergue, Retiring French president, who yesterday signalized France's amityl towards Italy, in an address given at Nice. Doumergue warned of dangers to be expected from Ger- many and urged maintenance of a strong military power to enforce peace. Following his address, he sailed for Bizert, Tunis, on an in- spection tour of the French pro- tectorate. I T A L I N F R I Students May Drive Cars at Noon Today W. B. Rea, assistant to the dean of students, yesterday stat- ed that the automobile regula- tion will be lifted at noon today and will remain off until Mon- day morning, April 20, after the spring recess. Further announcements in the executive offices yesterday statedt that no course may be droppedj in the literary college after todayI without an "E" grade. All changes in curricula must be made be- fore the vacation begins, it was announced. SENSATIONAL -NEWS nnnda rn n U i W1 Ini Following a short sickness, Ni national House of Representatives,x day morning in Aiken, S. C. Physic ing vitality that kept him alive dui Representative Longworth was taker OFFrICERHS NA9MED FOR~- R...IU I Retiring President in Farew, Address Recounts Previous well W. H. Fouche Receives.Position As Cadet Captain of Local Corps. Seventy-four R. O. T. C. men' yesterday were promoted by Major Basil D. Edwards and the other R. 0. T. C. officers. The promotions were approved by President Alexander G. Ruthven. The following announcement wasj given out Tuesday: To be cadet captain, W. H.' Fouche, 31E. Cadet first lieutenants will be E. E. Freeman, '33, R. M. Arnold, '32E. Cadets second lieutenants ap- pointed were W. J. Bird, '32E,3W. S.Crouch, '31E, .D. D. Lowber, '31E, R. E. Newcomb, '31, D. W. Scofield,' '31E, R. C. Sperry, '32E, J. G. Wil- son, '32E. The cadet master sergeant will be H. D. Davidson, '32E.* Cadet technical sergeants are H.{ E. Cheseborough, '32E, T. C. Hill, '32E, C. R. Holly, '32E, Walter Niel- son, '32, E. C. Spaulding, '33. Cadet staff sergeants appointed included P. F. Clement, '32E, D. C. McDougal, '32E, H. E. Moore, '32E,; M. W. Scofield, '32BAd. Cadet sergeants will be S. A. Col- lins, '32E, S. C. Czerw, '32E, E. O. D'Anna, '31, Erwin Greenbaum, '31, R. D. Goodrich, '32E, W. C. Hamlin, '32E, A.J. Hauserman, ''32, J. J. Maskey, '32E, Louis Oppenheim, '33E, A. J. Perrow, 34. Besides these men, 45 privates have been promoted to the raik of cadet corporal. MOVIE OF PASSION PLAY TOBE GIVEN Travel Talk and Film Will Be Shown April 21. A moving picture, featuring parts of the Oberammergau Passion Play, UIIIIULUL UUUUUViU TO "NAVA L .ATTACK1 Natigonalist Troops Open Fire- on Naval Guards at s Yangtse River. ICHANG, China, April 9.-(/P)-A battle between a handful of Amer- ican Naval guards aboard the I Yangtse River steamer Iping and aI considerable body of troops, sup- posedly Chinese Nationalist soldiers, took place near here early today. The Chinese soldiers opened fire on the ship but were silenced by the. American guns. The Chinese poured sharp firej into the Iping, which had been dis- I abled by striking a rock in the I Yangtse rapids and was limping into Ichang for repairs. The en- gagement was severe but short. The attack was made supposedly by Nationalist soldiers stationed above Ichang to prevent the entry of Communists into this city. y Having heard Chinese soldiers were searching ships aprpoaching Ichang, the Iping's captain slowedI down the ship, expecting a board- ing party to approach and look for Reds. Instead, the ship's officers said, the soldiers attacked the Iping without explanation, forcing the American guards to fire. Leo Bradley, first-class seaman,' U. S. N., was wounded in the leg and two Chinese aboard the ship were gravely 'wounded. The Iping managed to escape down the river after the gunfire from her decks had afforded an opportunity. Brad- ley's home is in Indianapolis. This was the second attack on the Iping in 24 hours. When 45 miles above Ichang Wednesday night anlarge groupof Communists laid down a barrage against the steamer and the American guards replied with accuracy, silencing the attack. Distribution of Senior Invitations Ends Today Seniors of the literary college will be given their last chance to order invitations and announcements for commencement today. The collec- tion of class dues and the sale of subscriptions to the Alumnus will also end this afternoon. Likewise today will be the last opportunity to place orders for caps and gowns, and canes. Orders for' the former are being taken at Van Boven's while Wagner's will secure the canes. Pipes may be ordered at IOsborn, with the exception of a Cordial Relations. few small donations. Deferring con- I sideration of her motion to con--U tinue the bureau under the new NICE, France, Apr. 9-(P)-Avow- administration, the council re- ing France's friendship for Italy in Schermerhorn Criticizes Papers' ferred the matter to the budget .his farewell address, retiring Pres- enenH committee. Tendencies to Headline Alderman C. C. Freeman, report- ident Gaston Doumegue siled to- ing on the activities of the ordin- day f spection tour of the French pro- ance committee, with regard to the ectontour oThe tendency of the modern daily proposed revision of the taxicab tectorate. nwppr ofwuetebzre ordinance, stated that a tentative In an address at a luncheon ten- newsp to fate the bizarre revision which had been drawn up dered him by the municipality of and sensational news, wasscored by the committee will be ready for Nice, President Doumergue recalledI yesterday by James Schermerhorn, eetto otecucla t htfre we n dtro h presentat othe councl at its that France and Italy were alie: Detroit Times, addressing an All- regular meeting Monday night. during the World war and predicted Campus forum in Alumni Memorial Fine Totals Given. .1the continuance of cordial rela- hall on "The Relation of the Met- In a report of police activities for tions between the two nations. ropolitan Press to the University." the month of March, Chief Thomas Declaring that France's Mediter- Normal news has no value for O'Brien revealed that a total of ranean shore was particularly dear today's paper, he declared. The $680 was taken in by the depart- to him, he continued: press is manufacturing "something ment in fines, and $44.90 in city "Noble and friendly nations frame for the market, for circulation. fees. The whole number of arrests ( the shore. One of them partook of : They are merchandising." for the month was placed at 55. our recent terrible trial and fought In referring to a questionnaire Ernst M. Wurster, city treasurer, valiantly and gloriously at our compiled by a Columbia University reported that $611,691.28 in school sides for defense and the triumph professor, who discovered that 40 taxes was collected in the city dur- of a great cause. per cent of the sensational type of ing the last month and turned over "In the course of that struggle, news published was disliked by 5,- to the board of education. our community of cultural interests 000 people questioned. Schermer- and sentiments affirmed itself in so 1 horn asked if there "isn't some- i striking a fashion that I am con- thing wrong with the sense of news Io-Il vinced the memory of it will always proportion, when excessive space is C remain living and active in our given to write-ups of recreation, hearts." scandal, and murder, and compara- Hwe , the President said, tively none to useful articles." France must be on her guard, par- The excessive front-page publici- ticularly "because of a brusque ty following the recent University event, the importance of which both .raids may be attributed to the Former School Board Treasurer for the present and future must 1 tendency of the modern press to Succumbs After Attack not be misunderstood." The hearers print "what's gone wrong, rather deduced that he was alluding to than news of cultural and educa- of ysiplas.tional value," the former editor - the Austro-German customs pact. tah The sentence of Grove J. Ray, "The very history of the country sate'. former treasurer and agent of the where that event occurred," he sai,M Ann Arbor board of education, end- "contains precedents full of teach- MIMES WILL GIVE ed yesterday morning when death, ings which it would be dangerous MYSTERY COMEDY following an illness of more than a for us to forget. I do not wish to month, expunged from the records dramatize anything, but we must l his term of from five to 15 years put things in their right propor- for embezzlenent. tions. For we must guard against 'The Perfect Alibi.' The 59-year-old man, who for other surprises and dangers which more than 35 years had held vari- they may bring." "The Perfect Alibi," by A. A. ous city and civic positions, died Milne, will be presented on Wed- in the hospital of the state prison Six Scholarships Given nesday, Thursday, Friday and Sat- at Jackson. iAurday the week following vacation His death was caused by erysip-' io MandelbaumAward by Mimes, honorary campus dra- elas, an illness which only last week matic society, it was announced became acute. Little hope had been Simon Mandelbaum scholarships, yesterday. The performances will held for his recovery. each bearing an annual stipend of be given in the Laboratory theatre. Ray was sentenced Feb. 26 by $600, were awarded yesterday to six Tickets are already on sale at the Judge Glen Gillespie, of Pontiac. 1students, three from the literary Union, where advance reservations Tacked to his sentence had been college and three from the engi- may be made. two provisions applicable if the for- neering college. Karl Litzenburg, of the English mer treasurer was to be released at George P. Loweke, '31, Frank E. department, is directing the play. the expiration of the minimum Cooper, '31, and Frank H. Baker, The cast includes Kathryn Kratz, term. At the end of five years, he '32, are the literary collegestudents '32, who played in the Junior Girls' would have been eligible to parole to be awarded scholarships. Others play, R. Duane Wells, '32, who took provided hisrecord at Jackson had were granted William Mikulas, '32E, parts in "The Bride," "Merrie-Go- been satisfactory, and restitution August G. Trometer, '32E, and Wil- Round," "An Episode," and "Pokey," had been made to the school board. liam H. Yenni, '32E. William Mulroney, '32, Harry L. Ar- Ray's first position with the board '__ _nold, 32, Irving Pearlstone, '33, of education was in 1902. From then Margaret Smith, '33A, Edith Gross- on until his sentence, he had served 'nsian Distribution berg, '33, William Dickert, '33, Ray as secretary, business manager, Announced for May 20 Suffron, '32, and Whitney Dixon, bookkeeper, and treasurer. He was '31. Suffron has had parts in sev- arrested Dec. 11, 1930, charged with The 191 Michioannian will he eral Play Production Dresentations His daughter, Paulina, was not with him. Taken ill Monday, physicians diagnosed his illness as pneu- monia. He steadily grew worse and 48 hours later they admitted his condition was desperate. Mrs. Longworth Notified. Mrs. Longworth was notified when it was determined he was suffering from pneumonia and she farrived in Aiken Wednesday. Her fortitude, Dr. H. R. Wilds of Aiken, one of the attending physicians, said, was remarkable. Two of Mrs. Longworth's broth- ers, Kermit and Archibald Roose- velt, were speeding to the bedside but had not arrived at the time of the speaker's death. Mr. Longworth arrived in Aiken March 30 to rest after the arduous duties as speaker of the house.. He developed a cold soon after arriv- ing but it was not believed serious until this week. He had played a little golf, friends said, but had done little else in the way of exer- -ise. Dr. Wilds said that no plans for she funeral had been made. He was :eaving the house for the first, Jime since Mr. Longworth became 3ritically ill. Nicholas knew nothing of what took place in and out of his room Wednesday night. He was fighting :pis last battle, losing but still ,fight- ng with such vitality that his .hysicians marveled. He knew how to fight. He learned that when he was elected to the board of education in Cincinnati in 1918 and through subsequent polit- cal victories to the speakership of the house, one of the most import- ant of American official posts. Press Awaits the End. Newspaper men stood with bowed aeads in the flowered portico of the .urtis colonial mansion early in the day as Dr. Wilds, one of Mr. Longworth's physicians told them he would live only a few hours. The doctor would not give up Hope, but Mr. Longworth didn't nave a chance, he said. Back to their typewriters went the men of the press, their hearts aeavy with the task to tell a wait- ing world what they feared and hoped against. Both inside and out- siae of the curtained window of the sick room the vigil continued. Doc- tors and nurses and loving hands administering to the losing fighter inside, newspaper men watching the inevitable. Then the doctor stepped out of the house and told the newspaper men the end had come. Throughout the world the news of his death flashed. Thousands of words described his, career. The vigil was over. Death of Speaker Adds To Confusion in House "Speaker Longworth's untimely death throws the already compli- cated situation in Congerss into confusion," stated Prof. James K. Pollock, of the political science de- partment, yesterday in an inter- view on the political consequences of the Speaker's death. "Even if he had lived, it is not certain that he would have been re-elected, due to the closeness in the voting strength of the parties." "During Longworth's speakership, the House gained considerably in power over legislation at the ex- pense of the Senate," Professor Pollock said. "We are however too near his regime to estimate his 'r t 1 y i ': ., S l ver submitted a bill which would will be presented at 8 o'clock Tues- make it unlawful to carry a gun y concealed or otherwise in an au-h day, April 21, in Hill auditorium. tomobile withouta permit. ITh picture, "Obrammergau with Scenesof the Passion Play of 1930," STURGIS-C. M. Ferner, superin- is a motion picture travel-talk by tendent of schools, today received E. M. Newman. an unsigned letter with a dollar bill Newman will not only present his enclosed which said "she had crash- own impressions of the 1930 play, ed" the graduation exercises 21 but will also show a new collection years ago at Sturgis High school. of still color views and motion pic- GRAND RAPTDS The Michigan tures, depicting the new outdoor S A U Rbasketball tournament theatre, the peasants at work on the stage'and at their daily occu- which opens here tomorrow eve- pations, the costumes and also