rABLISHED 1890 AVa AW MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVER SITY OF MICHIGAN Y VOL. XLI., No. 157. EIGHT PAGES ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN SUNDAY, MAY 10, 1931 PRICE FIVE uul d .. R S BUTLER URGES FOUNDATION TO AI DEPRESSION STUDY GOULD DISCUSSES ANA ARC TIC WORKI GOULD DESCRIBES POLAR EXPEDIION !. 3 Alumnus, Officer of Food Corporation, Talks at Luncheon Here. CALLS DROP OMAN-MADE' Says Institution Would Provide Insurance Against War on Present Order. Formation of a foundation for economic research to determine the c a u s e s of business depressions which, it' was proposed, would be international in scope and non- governmental in function, was urged here yesterday by Ralph Starr Butler, '04, vice president of Gen-1 eral Foods corporation. Speaking at a lunclieon of alum-I ni of the School of Business Ad- ministration, the New York execu- tive, declared the present depres- sion chiefly the result of man-made factors, which, if m a n - m ad e, "should be capable of control and correction by man." He told the more than 100 alumni who attended the conference in the Union that the proposed founda- tion, adequately supported to enlist the co-operative thought of the best brains in the world, is the most practical step that can now be tak- en. Funds Could Be Secured. Such a foundation could, Butler said, by scientific procedure, "elim- inate the uncontrollable factors in. the problem and direct its atten- tion to those man-made factors which, undoubtedly predominate." If the needs of a study were suf- ficiently recognized, funds to carryI on thedinquiry could be found, he auerted. h d, The funds should be provided,j Dr. Larry Gould, Second in command of the Byrd Antarctic expedition, who last night vividly described his year and a half residence in Little America1 where he and 41 companions lived and worked in temperatures as low as 74 below zero. The lecture was given to a large crowd in Hill audi- torium. ACCUSEDSTUDE INTS' ,FREED FROM JAIL Wi Face Charges of Reckless Driving and Drunkenness in Court Monday. Gordon Lamb, '32M, of Ann Ar- bor, and Lyman A. Brewer III, '32M, of Toledo, were released from the county jail here yesterday after- non and ordered to appear in court at 9 o'clock, Monday morning, to. answer charges made against them folowing an automobile accident at 2:30 o'clock, Friday night, at Lima Center. Lamb is charged with driving. Movies Aid Former Universityj Geologist in His Vivid Recounting. LONG TREK DESCRIBED Famed Byrd Expedition Pictured in Personal Account at Hill Auditorium. Larry Gould came back to Ann Arbor last night from the "roaring 40's, the howling 50's and the shrieking 60's" of Little America, base for the famous Byrd Antarc- tic expedition, on which he was second in command, with one of the most thrilling descriptive trav- elogues ever unfolded before an audience in Hill auditorium. Movies never before shown in Ann Arbor, vividly augmenting Dr. Gould's weird story of more than a year of residence where the ther- mometer sometimes reached 74 be- low zero and the yearly average is 13 below, were used, as were slides, to 1ivake the narrative of the ex- pedition a life-like one. Introduced by hobbs. Dr. Gould, introduced by his for- mer teacher and present colleague and friend W. H. Hobbs, professor of geology, began his lecture with short explanations , of the differ- ences between the Arctic and the Antarctic regions. The texture of the snow-ice, which hindered much of the expedition's work, made work difficult, Dr. Gould stated, especial- ly, if a wind .werepresent. Phenomena of the Antarctic con- sumed a large part of the facts dis- closed during the lecture, of ex- treme interest among these being movies of the bad cases of sunburn, acquired at 50 below zero from the glaring snow, the visit of whales. within a few hundred feet of the ;axnppand concentated food in the form of biscuits which had to be broken with a geologist's hammer. Describes Famous Trek. Dr. Gould spoke in detail of his famous trek inland in search of I geological material, and movies of the Byrd flight to the South Pole, following the same route, disclosed the tremendous importance of the Michigan man's intensive study. Moving whole mountain ranges on the official geographical survey maps was a day's work, Dr. Gould said. RHICHARDS TO SPEAK' ON MODERN POERY Cambridge University Professor, Instructor of P. M. Jack, to Lecture Tuesday. POORMN CLIMS STATESMEN GI BEST AID ABRDAQ Weygandt Cites Companionship Need at Annual Father; Sons Banquet. LAUDS SPORTSMANSHIP Says Habit Patterns of Men Are Formed Before They Leave School. "Our statesmen are now over in Europe solving the European prob- lems for the Europeans, but they should stay here and solve the problems of our country. They are making Europe safe for Europeans and the world safe for democracy, but we must make America safe for Americans and American insti- tutions," said A. G. Poorman, '03L, in a talk at the Father and Son banquet at the Union last night. He stated that wherever one goes, he finds Michigan men lead- ing the world in their chosen fields. If fathers will be the guiding light and inspiration for their sons, they will be able to accomplish anything they attempt, he said. He believes that America is now passing through a great crisis, and great leaders are needed to carry us safely through. Judge Weygandt Speaks. Judge C. B. Weygandt, of Cleve- land, spoke on "The Rules of the Game." He said, "There is no more valuable training than to play games under such leaders as Yost, Stagg, and Rockne. Nothing finer can be learned in classrooms than the sportsmanship learned undr these coaches." Weygandt declared that habit patterns of men are formed before they leave school, and cheating or similar habits can not easily be dropped later in ltfer He also stated that fathers are in vital need of the companionship of their sons, and the sons of their 'fathers, and they should synmpa- thize with each other. r:u.aven Welcomes Guests. President Alexander Grant Ruth- yen, after welcoming the pareUts, told of the difficulty of >compre- hending the great modern uniyr- sities, and mentioned that Mihi- gan extended to all parts of the world. There is much criticism of the present universities and stu- dents he said, but although there are a feW' students who are not ;a credit to the, school, the percentage of undesirables is decreasing. Our whole social fabric is being rer- ganized, and "we are handling oer a disorganized world, and studentsI should be equipped for it. This can; be accomplished only through our1 modern educational institutions. FINAL COMMERCE SESSIONS CLOSE, Varsity Nine Loses; Track Team Victor Michigan von three and lost one intercollegiate athletic con- test yesterday. The Varsity base- ball team :'ost to Chicago 4-0 when Henshaw held the Wolves to seven widely scattered hits. Coach Hoyt's track team easily defeated Minnesota here 89 1-2 to 45 1-2. The golf and tennis teams both defeated Northwest- ern, the golfers winnings12 1-2 to 5 1-2, And the Tennis squad letting the Purple down 7-2. (Complete Sports on Pages 6&7) SOCIEITYTO HONOR H{RUTHVEN SL.OSSON Alpha Nu Chapter of Kappa Phi Sigma Will Initiate 48 Students Tuesday. President Alexander Grant Ruth- vcn and Prof. Preston W. Slosson, of the history department, will be given honorary membership Tues- day afternoon in Alpha Nu of Kap- pa Phi Sigma, it was announced yesterday. At the same time, 18 students will be initiated preceding a ban- quet to be held at 6:15 o'clock Tuesday night in room 222 in the Union. The program for the banquet, J. C a1vin Callaghan, '31, president, said, will consist largely of talks by. past presidents of the organiza- tion. Included among these are Albert Donohue, '31; president last year and now ,president of the Un- ion; H. LeRoy Selmeier, '27, and Lyle E. Eiserman, '28, national pres- ident of Kappa Phi Sigma. The address will be made by Richard D. T. Hollister, '02, pres- ident of the society in 1902. Presentation of shingles and in- signia to pledges by Byron C. Ved- der, "33, vice-president, will be made at the banquet, Callaghan said. STILL OBTAINABLE Sink Says That Music School Office Has Single Concert Tickets Left. NOTED SCIENTIST SUCCUMBS AT 78 I COMPLETED T. Third Measurement < Rays Finished Last Week. PASADENA, Cal., May 10 (A') - Dr. Albert A. Michelso who determined the speed of hg died here today. He was 78 yea old. Two years ago Dr. Michels suffered a paralytic stroke. Thr months ago the little profess was forced to take to bed in L Buffalo home near here. Tv days ago the great mind snapp with a cerebral hemorrhage. Mic elson went into a 'coma Thursd AAiiNIOFIND ER OF LiGH VELOCITY, DIE Noted Physicist Pass After Illness of Two Years Dr. Albert A. Michelson, ' Discoverer of the velocity of light and professor at the University of Chicago, who died last night after an illness that has extended over more than two years. Dr. Michel- son had just completed further ex- periments on the speed of light in his laboratory in Pasadena, Cal. night; a sleep that ended quie death shortly before 1 p. m.,t GANGSTERS OAIGHT Dr. Michelson, who for Iyears was head of the physic partmnent at.Chicago Unive seemed resigned to death, knc that he had staved it off unti last great experiment was Six Kidnappers, Bank Robbers pleted. This was his third and precise measurement of the spi Captured in Latest Raids; light. For two years his will ] Loot Totals Millions. was credited with holding bac 1progress of creeping paralysis CHICAGO, May 9._(A1)- -The au- which he was stricken in Ch thorities have struck at gangland Called Associate. again-this time to capture, they Too feeble to move, his claimed, a gang of six kidnapers limbs completely paralyzed, and bank robbers whose loot and, Michelson this week called ransom money ran into the- mil-1Francis G. Pease, of the Can lions, including $200,000 taken in institution of Washington, t the Denver mint holdup of 1922. bedside. Pease had been can Their proceeds were estimated by , on the final work of the last 1 their accusers at $6,000,000, of ! elson 'experiment 'with .theI which $1,000,000 was fixed as ran- long vacuum tubes at Santa P som money in kidnapings. He had come to tell the great s The six were caught in a spec-I Iist that his experimenital wor' tacular raid on what officers des- 'completed, and all that rem cribed as a " gangster fiat" in down1 was the recheck of instrumentl East St. Louis, Ill., late Friday, a" measurements to derive the the result of the combined efforts figures of the speed of light. to federal, state, and local author- In a soft voice, barely audil ities. An hour later they were the quiet bedroom, Michelson started, under heavy guard, in nine ed dictating. Page after pa automobiles, toward Chicago. They lucid, scientific analysis was' paused over-night at Springfield, down by Pease. Thus was w: Said by police to be remnants the introduction to Michel of the Cuskoo and Shelton gangs formal report, the last word of southern Illinois and to ghave the world of science from the also been affiliated with the "mob" who had been in the vanguai of Fred Burke. notorious' irilir.th more than 30 years. etly tod ma' es d 'rsi iowi: tilY coy arres,. 4 >U4someu, i UeUI~eu, er is charged with viola some insurance against the risk of prohibition law and resistir political or military action to over- Following the crash, a turn the present industrial order." ment arose between the Convincea that on the part of an the driver of the true business men and economists there was involved in the acciden is too general an acceptance of the ty Sheriff John Osborn, inevitability or recurring periods of boxer, was summoned ai great prosperity and intense de- finding whisky in the stud pression, Butler said: - was suddenly attacked b Scores Defeatists.' and knocked unconscious. "While business leaders have a William Dailey, another growing appreciation of the men- sheriff, who appeared shor ace of such conditions as those was also attacked by La through which we are now passing, was' checked when the offi there is a defeatist' attitude toward duced a pistol and a black, any suggestion of effective action The police are holding th that will remove the causes of re- tes, of whisky as evidenc( tarded business activity. they say was found in the, "There seems to be throughout students said they borro' the world today an acceptance of car from a friend, and werE the inevitability of even the most back to Ann Arbor from extreme manifestations of the bus- Osborn is suffering from a iness cycle comparable to the ac- ed nose and a black eye, bu ceptance of the inevitability of wise was uninjured. plagues, famines, and floods before mankind courageously set out to conquer the adverse forces of na-- tural causes, Complete Stabilization Impossible It is imperative that he (man) abandon his complacent acceptance ued recurrence of this man-made evil, depression, and that he adopt High Freight Rates, Di toward it the same courageous at- Markets Cited as Ca titude that his ancestors adopted of Harlan Strife. toward disasters attendant upon ..__ natural causes." ~~H~AN,~y., May ~~~ - In asserting the need of an inter- nation's business adversi national foundation, Butler said blamed by mine workers i he did not expebt that all the ers as the underlying factc minor dips and rises in the busi- Harlan coal field strike t ness curve would be straightened Hostafcvelied k out, and that complete stabilization would ensue.A depressed coal marl (Continued of Page 2) high freight rates from the fields were given as princi ting the ng arrest. in argu- students .k which nt. Depu- a former ad after ents' car by, Lamb r deputy tly after, mb, but icer pro- jack. hree bot- ;, which car. The wed the ,e driving Jackson. fractur- ut other- ,] , epressed iuses (IF)-The ties are nd own- or in the hat has ket and e Harlan pal rea- Prof, I. A. Richards, of the Uni- versity of Cambridge, England, and visiting professor at Harvard uni- versity, will lecture at eight o'clock Tuesday night in room 1025 Angell hall, on "Modern Poetry." SProfessor Richards is the most 1 distinguished critic, of modern lit- erature, .and has developed a new scientific kind of literary criticism, based on the latest knowledge of human psychology, according to Prof. 0. J. Campbell of the English department. Professor Richards will speak on the works of T. S. Eliot, Gerard Manley Hopkins, W. B. Yeals, Wal- ter de La Mare, and other modern authors. Jack, recently a member of the rhetoric department here, was one of Professor Richards' pupils, and exemplified his critical methods, Professor Campbell said. International Busincess Congress Keeps Report Secret. WASHINGTON, M a y 9.-(/F) - T h e International 'Chamber of Commerce approached the end of its sixth biennial congress today in an atmosphere of .speculation ove:j a closely-guarded resolution em- bacing its recommendations for bettering world' economic condi- tions. Leaders had indicated the pro- posal would mention most, if not all, of the controversal subjects onj the agenda, including war debts. the Tariff, and commercial policies, but they advised not to expect any- thing "sensational." The resolutions committee was called to meet before the final plen-! ary session to complete the final draft. Its probable contents were] held in strictest secrecy over-night, Tickets for single concerts for the May Festival are still on sale at the offices of the School of Music, it was announced yesterday by Dr. Charles Sink, president of the school. The concerts will com- mence next Wednesday and last through Saturday. The artists who will feature this series are Lily Pons, Ignace Paderewski, Nelson Eddy, Walter Widdop, Cyrena van Gordon, Ruth Brton, and many others. Dr. Sink yesterday also received' a letter from William Wade Hin- shaw, former star with the Metro- politan Opera company, who wrote, in part: /' : "I have just received you! an- nouncement of this year's May Fes- tival, and I want to congratulate you again, as I do every year, on the wonderful program you are to present." six were accused of participation in more than 60 bank robberies in Illinois, Iowa; Wisconsin and Ne- braska, including the theft of $1,- 000,000 from Lincoln, Neb., Nation- al bank Sept. 17, 1930. The accusations against the six, whose names were given as Tom- my Hayes, Thomas O'Connor, Jack Britt, Howard Lee, E. Hawks and William McQuillan, were made by McWhorter, a n d Patrick Roche, chief investigator for the state. SWEDISH' FLYERS, LAUD AHRENBERG /cro Club of Stockholm Honors Ftder of Courtauld. Won Nobel Prize. Dr. Michelson was born Decemi 19, 1852. He first became interest in his life work as a physics instrt 'tor at the Naval academy, where made great, advances in metho used in measuring the speed light. He was the first American scie tist to win the Nobel prize f physics, which was given him the completion of experiments which the exact speed of light w first measured. Herdeveloped ma other methods for. fine measu ments and delicate processes. CUSSARTA - NGAGE State B i I ~ (By 4Asrrnte Saturday. Ma BURLINGTON - gasoline stove, follov barbershop here ca three men and for a ed destruction of ti trict of this village guished after the 1 an adjoining barbe: destroyed. BENTON HARB rains today forced menf. of thea annu sons for wage readjustments and irregularity of work, An attempt fli Ills to unionize the field was made, and definite breach between opera- d Press) tors and workers followed. y 9; 1931 The position of the operators was outlined by George Ward, acting Explosion 'of a secretary of the Harlan Coal Oper- wed byfirein a ators' association; B. W. Whitfield, ued bnry fe of the Harlan collieries, and Mrs. time threateno S. E. Bennett, of the Bonita mines, he business dis- only woman operator in the field. but was extin- W. M. Hightower, president of barbershop and the local union of the United Mino rshop had been Workers of America at Evarts, storm center of the disorders, and the union secretary, W. B. Jones, OR - Continued explained the workers' viewpoint. i the postpone- Harlan never has been a regular- 1 honm n - ly unionized field. The mines. PROF. WALTER SADLER CITES NEED OF REGULATION FOR BUSES, TRUCKS Exploding Still Starts Detroit Conflagration DETROIT, May 9--(/P)-Explosion of a still Friday night wrecked the otherwise vacant house in which it was located, set fire to three nearby buildings and sent a small river of flaming alcohol into the street. Hidden in the attic of the house, the still broke through to the base - ment when it exploded. The 200- pound cover was blown through the 1 roof, to light on and ignite an ad- joining house. Homecoming Program Will Conclude Today Final event,, in the Spring Homecoming program are sched- iled for today, with Senior Cane Day and Mothers' Day featuring thelis;. As ec,,;n ,n ,,nert, ,th STOCKHOLM, Sweden, May 9.-- HU awarded Capt. Albin AhrenbergA Swedish civilian pilot, its gold medal in recognition of his flight Theatre Guild Character Actc to Greenland to attempt rescue of Is Secured to Appear in Augustine Courtauld, British scien- Two Productions. tist who spent the winter on thed. .Greenland ice cap. F'ne St Cossart, character act Capt. Ahrenberg landed at Court-o theNe or Thare i, auld's camp a few hours after he of the New York Theatre guild, h had been rescued by H. G. Watkins, frt ear's Ay Rber drn head of the British Arctic air routeor this years Ann Arbor dramat expedition., scason, it was carned today fro ' New York City. Mr. Cossart h NDON, L May 9.- (P) Friends of ju t lo ed as the lead in Berna: Augustine Courtauld, young Britishjihaw's "Gcting Married" at ti scientist who is proceeding to safety Gould theatre, in New York. An after a winter spent on the Green-m Arbor audiences wilt remember hi land ice cap, do not expect to see as the labor minister in Shaw him in England until September. "The Apple Cart," which played It is believed that another week Detroit this fall with Tom Powe will be occupied in traveling by dog as the star. sledge with H. G. Watkins, head of Cossart will appear In two pr the British Arctic air route expedi- ductions of the dramatic seaso tion, from his winter igloo to the He will play the role of the fath expedition base near Augmagsalik. in Shaw's "Arm and The Mar which he created in the Theat Sp ecial Diagonal Iiguild performance in New Yox .jnIssue "Mr. Powers has been eager to S Says Railroads Would Make Bus Companies Operate on Schedules. Need of federal regulation; for the bus and truce service through- out the country was stressed by Prof. Walter C. Sadler, of the engi-- neering college, in an interview concerning the recent developments inate small companies from com- ing in and taking the cream of the business during a period of pros- perity. It would also result in bet- ter service for the public, he said. The private ownership of auto- mobiles was cited by Professor Sad- ler as the greatest factor in the de- crease of the number of passengers using the trains. The truck has taken some of the freight business