ESTABLISHED 1 890 EI DTE A I D AND P~UBLISHED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVE RSIT Y OF MICHIGAN MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS VOL. XLL No. 15 EIGHT PAGES ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1930 PRICE FIVE CENTS THIEME ANNOUNCES DISTRIBUTION PLAN FOR SCHOLARSHIPS Strong, Marsh Funds to Offer $1,500 to $2,000 in f Small Awards. OUTLINE REQUIREMENTS Personal Need Impression, Financial Will be Factors Considered. Between $1,500 and $2,000 will be distributed within the next few weeks to students needing financial support, it was announced yester- day by Prof. Hugo P. Thieme, of the French department, chairman of the committee in charge of the Henry Strong and Marsh schol- arships. Of the amount available $1,500 was made possible through the Strong foundation and $500 was added under the Marsh bequest. Restricted to Literary College. Eligibility for the scholarships, which will be available only to students in the College of Liter- ature, Science and the Arts, will be determined through three judges, Professor Thieme, Prof. Henry Huchirls, of the Englis11 depart- ment, and Prof. Floyd E. Bartell, of the chemistry department. Con- sideration will be made on the basis of scholarship, personal im- pression and financial need. I Students wishing to obtain the scholarships are asked to fill out completely the application blanks which are available in Dean John R. Effinger's office and to give a personal history of themselves as well as the grades received in Uni- versity courses to date. These ap- plication blanks will be read care- fully by each of the three commit- teemrien and interviews will be granted to students fulfilling the initial requirements. Those making the greatest impression upon the committee in the interviews and those having the greatest need for the available funds will be given scholarships ranging from $100 to $200. The closing date for the appli- cations has been set for Oct. 25. Seniors to Have Preference. Upperclassmen, especially seniors, will be given preference in the allot- ment of the $2,000 now available, Professor Thieme stated yesterday. Scholarship will be of primary im- portance in the distribution, he de- clared. In many cases in the past, the $100 and $200 scholarships have enabled students who were working from 35 to 45 hours a week outside of school to cut that extra time to 20 hours, leaving more than three hours a day open for school work. Scholarships to be distributed this, fall will number between 10 and 15 depending on the amount necessary in each case. POLICEMEN QUELL COMMUNIST RIOTS One-Time Assistant to Drugs Magnate Rewarded at Last ( La r,' !ssocwiab'I Press) CHICAGO, Oct. 14--Good deeds done mre than 30 years ago to- day began paying dividends to Charley Morris, a Negro who had beyn dodging hard luck unsuc- cessfully since the Spanish- American War. Before the war Charley was a $9 a week porter in a drug store, where he became a warm friend of Charles Walgreen, an $18 a week clerk. Before the war end- ed Waigreen was sent home ill and the Negro and his wife nursed him back to strength in their own home. Then they part- ed and for 30 years neither knew where the other was. Dame Fortune smiled on Wal- green. He rose to the head of a huge drug store chain. Morris was luckless and while ill and jobless saw an advertisement in a Chicago paper the other day bearing the name of "Walgreen." As he sat in the reception room a bald-headed man stopped and looked at him. "Isn't your name Morris?" he inquired. "Sure is, boss," said Charley, and then, "say you ain't Charley Walgreen that used to work with me in a drug store before the war?" "That's exactly who I am," Walgreen replied, and the spec- tators stared as the drug store magnate grabbed the old Negro and hugged him like a long lost brother. And, to make a long story short, Charley walked out of the office, with a life-time job with his old boss. DRY BUREAU SEEKS CENSUS OF PRESS HITLER PLANS NEWI FASCIST REICHSTA C AS ADISORY BODY German Party Leader Hopes to Place Legislature Under One-Man Control. WOULD SPEED UP GROUP Suggests Germany Adopt System of Responsibility Used in Former Prussian Army. (S Assocated Press) BERLIN, Oct. 14.-Notwithstand- ing Adolf Hitler's bitter attempt for parliamentary government it won't be necessary to tear down the Reichstag building if he and his followers realize their ambition to establish a German fascist state. Under Hitler the Reich still would have its Reichstag, but the Reich- stag members would not have to wrangle among themselves f o r weeks or months trying to come to a decision. They merely would ex- press their various opinions on the question at issue, leaving it to one man to decide and to bear the re- sponsibility of his decision. Urges Responsibility of Leaders The new German state must be, as Hitler expresses it, "organized on the principle of the old Prus- sian army, that of absolute author- ity for each leader over those sta- tioned below him, and absolute re- sponsibility of eackh leader to his superiors. This would not elimin- ate parliament and councils but their functions would be to advise, not to decide." Such a combination of personal authority and responsibility co-ex-' istent with elected advisory bodies, Hitler believes, will not mean the killing off of parliaments but their elevation to a position of real use- fulness. To use his own words: One Man to Bear Responsibility "Their advice then really will ad- vise, but the responsibility can and must be borne only by one person, who at the same time must possess. the sole authority and right of command. Parliaments in and of themselves are necessary, for it is above all in such assemblages that those minds to whom one later can entrust especially important tasks have an opportunity to lift them- selves gradually above the crowd." But the tellers who have been so busy in recent Reichstag sessions counting the inevitable votes can take a vacation then. And the vot- ing urns which today are a picture- sque feature of the Reichstag fur- niture can be stowed away in the attic. MARKET LEADERS ASK FOR RELIEF Stock Exchange Officers Seek Presidential Aid. BY t' ,ssoriatcd Press) WASHINGTON, Oct. 14.-White House attaches disclosed tonight that officers of the sagging New York Stock Exenange conferred here with President Hoover on Sun- day night at a conference sought. SPANISH COLLEGE CLOSEDBY DEANS Students Mutilate Portrait of King; Classes Suspended. 0 'N.Assoc ie cd Press) MADRID, Oct. 14.-One of Spain's greatest universities, that at Barce- lona, today was closed by a vote of the deans and all classes suspended indefinitely because of grave disor- ders within its precincts, involving what the authorities characterized as gross disrespect for the king. Re- opening will not occur until after today's riot has been fully cleared up. Investigators were ordered to find the leaders of some 500 students who at mid-day stormed the main assembly hall and took from it a portrait of Alphonso, burning it in the yard after cutting out the head, which they mounted on a pole and paraded about the grounds. MURDERERS CLIN SPEEDY SENTENkCEi Spectacular Man-Hunt Directed From Radio Station Results in Capture. GOVERNMENT ROAD BUILDING WILL AID IN DROUGHT RELIEF Highway Construction Program to Provide Assistance for Unemployed. HYDE AUTHORIZES MOVE Apportionment Date Advanced { for States Stricken Last Summer. (By Associated Press> WASHINGTON, Oct. 1. - The federal government has made im- mediately available to drought states a 1932 allotment of its $125,000,000 appropriation for aid to highway construction as a means to providing employment for drought-stricken farmers. The action, taken at the instance of the national drought relief com- mittee, was made public today by Dr. C. W. Warburton, the secretary, in reply to a telegram from Harry Flood Byrd, former governor ofI HYDE AUTHORIZES ROADS CAMPAIGN I 1 1SLa* d I bL t ) .Jst'}t Arthur M. Hyde, Chairman of the national com- mittee on drought relief, who has authorized the immediatefappor- tionment of $125,000,000 for road construction in drought - stricken states in order to relieve the unem- ployment situation. Questionnaires Sent to Regarding Attitude Liquor Issue.. Editors on 15 Reds Arrested in Attempt Invade Labor Convention. Io (By Associated Press) BOSTON, Oct. 14. - Fifteen per- sons, five of them women, were ar- rested today during a pitched battle between police and a group of 50 communists who attempted to in- vade the national convention of the American Federation of Labor. For fully 20 minutes the commun- ists and police, hemmed in by a crowd of more than 1,000 specta- tors, fought outside the Hotel Brad- ford, where the federation is in session. Heads were cracked and policel uniforms were tgrn while patrol wagons rushed police reserves to the scene from a nearby precinct sta- tion. Taxicabs pressed into service as patrol wagons were filled while communists struggled to rescue the prisoners. The communists gave advance warning of their intention to stage a denonstration today. For the past several days hand bills were circulated, calling upon the "milit- ant workers of Boston" to join in a demonstration today. While the labor convention open- ed this morning police were on duty outside the hotel and in the corridors leading to the convention hall, but this detail was inadequate to handle the fighting radicals. Fog Delays Aviatrice's Transcontinental Hopj RESULT TO BE ISSUED (BAissociated Press) WASHINGTON, Oct. 14:-T h e bureau of prohibition of the de- partment of justice has asked 3,- 000 newspapers of the country to express their sentiment on the na- tional prohibition law. It ann~ounces today that the di- vision of research and public infor- mation had mailed questionnaires to the newspapers. The question- naire asks if the newspapers favor the Eighteenth Amendment and the national prohibition law, whether t.hey are opposed to the law and whether they are neutral. When the replies are received the information will be compiled and made the subject of a mono- graph to behissued by the bureau. The questionnaires were sent out by E. A. Grant, acting chief of the division of research and public in- formation. The letter transmitting the ques- tionnaire told the editors that the prohibition bureau wanted to get the attitude of the press of the na- tion as a whole upon the subject of the Eighteenth Amendment and the administration of the -dry laws. MlDaugherty Under Bond for 58 Charges (l? AssociatId Press) WASHINGTON COURT HOUSE, 0., Oct. 14. - Mal S. Daugherty, banker. who figured in the fringes of the investigation into the Teapot Dome oil lease of the Harding ad- ministration, was under $40,000 bond today, charged with embez- zlement, misapplication of funds and falsification of statements. Daugherty was indicted on 58 counts Monday by the Fayette county grand jury which investi- gated the closings last summer of Ohio State bank, of which Daugh- erty was president, and Peoples and Drovers bank. His brother, former Attorney General Harry M. Daugherty, of Columbus, and his mother, Mrs. Jane Daugherty, of this city, signed the bond for his release. ILatin Professor Will Discuss Virgilian Trip ARRAIGNED IN 24 HOURS Virginia and chairman of that state's drought relief committee. (By Associated Press) Byrd Asks Definite Statement. JACKSON, Oct. 14.-Less than 24 Byrd had asked that a definite hours after they robbed a branch statement of national relief plans bank in Battle Creek of $2,700 and be made public promptly so that killed a state policeman who sought Virginia plans might be made to to capture them, James Gallagher, co-ordinate with them. "I think you will realize," War- of Toledo, and Thomas Martin, of burton telegraphed Byrd, "that the Chicago, tonight were in the Mich- federal authorities have offered igan state prison for the remainder large resburces to aid in relieving of their lives, the situation and it is our desire to co-operate with you in the work Gallagher and Martin, captured your committee is doing." in Indiana last night after a spec- The highway funds, which or- tacular, man hunt directed from dinarily would not have been avail- the ne'w state police radio station able until July 1, 1931, will be paid at East Lansing, were arraigned on only to the states in need of first degree murder charges today drought relief. Apportionment of by Circuit Judge Glenn E. Warner, the funds was authorized by Secre- of Paw Paw, sitting at Centerville. tary Hyde, chairman of the na- They were immediately given life tional committee, however, in Au- terms and transported to the prison gust. here. This was done to enable the The robbers, who escaped from states to make contracts against the east side branch of the Old the 1932 allotments which when ap- Merchants National Bank and Trust portioned, assured them of the Co. in Battle Creek yesterday after- sums they would receive from the noon, shot and killed State Trooper government. John S. Burke, of the White Pigeon Action Not Made Public. post, near Burr Oak. Burke was at- Although the action was not tempting to arrest the robbers after made public, Warburton explained having overtaken them on his mot- that the various state drought com- orcycle. mittees had been advised of the The hunt for the robbers was the step upon receipt of a favorable first in which the new state police ruling by Controller General Nogarl radio station, WRDS, has had a early this month. chance to function in a major He sent the reply in the absence crime. A description of the robbers of Secretary Hyde, national chair- was broadcast from the station and man, to whom Byrd had addressed eleven armored cruisers dispatched. his telegram. Warburton said that When captured the robbers had while Virginia's allotment is over $2,300 of the bank loot in their $2,250,000, and officials had been pockets. advised it was immediately avail- able, "we have as yet had no call Twio Priests, Aviator or indication of any commitments in this direction from your state Killed in Plane Crash and would, of course, be glad to know what progress is being made (KT .ocia4ed P.ss) in the most important arm of KOTZEBUE, Alaska, Oct. 14.- rle. HOBBS WILL TALK AT CAMPU-SFORUM Geologist to Speak on Value of Present Exploration to Civilization. OPENS 1930-1931 SERIES Prof. William H. Hobbs, head of the Geology department and well known authority on meterology and arctic exploration will open the series of All Campus forums tomorrow afternoon at 4:15, in Room D Alumni Memorial hall with a talk upon the subject, "The value of Present Day Exploration to Civ- ilization." Professor Hobbs' connection with exploration rests chiefly with his Greenland expeditions of 1927 and 1928. On these trips a meteorolo- gical station was established at Mt. Evens, and data on weather condi- tions was collected which is of in- estimable scientific value in deter- mining the weather forecasts for the North Atlantic. "The North Pole of the Winds" is the title of a book by Professor Hobbs on the subject of his work in Greenland. In this volume he shows that Greenland is the north pole of the winds for by means of observation balloons and other re- cording equipment the expedition learned that"in the upper strata of the atmosphere the winds blow in toward the center of the great Greenland ice cap; here they come together and descend, after which they blow out from Greenland in all directions. The author also discusses in the book the possibil- ity of air routes between Europe and America passing over Green- land, Professor Hobbs has traveled ex- tensively through Europe, India and Australia. He has studied earthquakes extensively in many nart of hi.te r ld d-n-. ha in - lA..1 r if c t. 0 a fl 0 a s c p b s t a t e v b c t r. t t e X f t i r, v t t i t f c 6 f f c The Marquette, an airplane dedi- cated to missionary service in Alaska, took two Catholic priests and a noted northern aviator to their deaths when it fell during a SLOSSON SPEAKS ON PARTY RULE ENIOR 1LIEAR cLASS TO HOLD ELECTION TODAY Nominations Will Open This Afternoon at 4:15 O'clock. BELL TO PRESIDE Candidates Must Have Certification of Eligibility. Seniors of the literary college of the University will elect their class )fficers for the coming year at 4:15 'clock this afternoon in the Natur- al Science auditorium. Nominations for ofhices will be made from the loor starting at promptly 4:15 o'clock after which balloting will continue until 5:15. the entire Student council will supervise the elections as well as count the votes cast. Merton J. Bell, '31, president of the council will preside. Must Present Eligibility Slip. Before a candidate for office may be voted upon, he must present a slip, from the office of the Dean of Students, certifying his eligibility, to the council. This arrangement is designed to eliminate repetitions of he past when persons have been elected and afterwards found inel- gible. Students voting at the election will be checked off a list compiled by the Recorder's office. To be in- luded on the list, one must have to his credit not less than 88 hours nor more than 120. Those, thinking they are eligible who are not on the list, may apply for a slip of eligibility at the Recorder's office. No Balloting by Proxy.' "r Balloting by proxy will not be permitted, according to Bell. A fool- proof system has been devised so that illegal voting and ballot-stuff- ing will be made impossible. The elections will take place no matter . what condition of the weather may be. M'CARTHY SIGNS WITH YANKEES Agrees to Lead American League Team for Two Seasons. (Br associated Press) NEW 'YORK, Oct. 14.-Joe Mc- Carthy today finally took off his National League uniform and de- clared his allegiance to the Amer- ican League by signing a contract to manage the New York Yankees for the next two years. The former manager of the Chi- cago Cubs posed with 'Jacob Rup- pert, president of the Yankees, be- fore as many photographers as there are players on a major club, as he affixed his signature to the document which he calls "the best contract I ever signed." McCarthy's reference was ' the only one made to the figures in the contract, but it was supposed that he was paid $25,000 a year at Chicago and probably received an increase of at least $5,000. Vaccinations Lighten Workouts of Purple (ivAssociated Press) EVANSTON, Ill., Oct. 14,-North- western's football squad spent an- other maddening day walking thru plays and waiting for vaccinations to declare thenselves. Coach Dick- Hanley spent a good share of the period on blackboard work, most of which was for the benefit of the line. He indicated Dilley would move into the guard position va- cated by the ineligibility of Harry Kent. Illini Freshmen Score Heavily Over Varsity (la, asociated Press) CHAMPAIGN, Ill., Oct. 14.--Pros- pects for victory over Northwest- ern's jinx-riddled eleven were not so bright tonight, after the fresh- men, headed by Al Hall, scored four touchdowns on Bob Zuppke's i test flight here. Faculty Man Talks on Popular by them. The Rev. Phillip I Delon, head of ed in mountain climbing as a pas- The nature of the conference was ThRe.PilpIDloeaof as t enaluef beonfthati had the Jesuit missions in Alaska, the Government in U. S. time. In 1908 he broke the existing not revealed beyond that it had Rev. William F. Welsh of the time record for the ascent of Mt. particular reference to the stock Kotzebue mission, and Ralph Wien, Although the party system as es- Blanc.t has been marked lately by declin- Alaska pilot, died in the crash. tablished in the United States is ing prices but which moved upward Witnesses said the plane, a six- one of the necessary evils attendant Careless Player Hurts ltes day t wpassenger cabin ship, plunged to upon popular government, no alter-i lRichardt Whitney, president of earth when the motor stalled. The native has been devised, with theVeteran Chicago Coach the New York Stock Exchange, and accident occurred at the local air- possible exception of the dictator, to YkrtSunda take its place, Prof. Preston W. (By Associated Press) Allen Lindley, vice-president, were poy. Slosson of the history department CHICAGO, Oct. 14.-Amos Alonzo the White House visitors. They ' itold members of Alpha Nu at the Stagg, now 68 years old, reluctantly had dinner with the president up- Chinese Federals Face weekly meeting of the society last admitted tonight that he perhaps is on his return from his Rapidan Hard Fight with Reds night.py football lodge Sunday night and remained The tremendous size of this coun- against the youngsters he is coach- for a conference later. (By Associated Press) try necessitates a mass of machin- ing at Chicago. The conference aroused imme- SHANGHAI, Oct. 14. - With the !ery incidental to the selection of Stagg, becoming disgusted at the diate speculation here tonight. Nationalist military at Nanking public officials, Professor Slosson blocking in a practice session, News of it became known when the professedly turning its attention pointed out, adding that even the sprinted from the sidelines to show market had closed today after from the civil war in the north to dictatorship of Italy has not been his Maroons just how he blocked3 another sinking spell in the early t h e eradication of Communists entirely successful, whereas the two when he was a star at Yale 40-odd' trading. south of the Yangtse river, reports party system has achieved a satis- years ago. A strapping sophomore White House officials declined to today on conditions throughout the factory degree of efficiency. named Carl Gabel of Chicago, ac- comment upon rumors that the I Red-infested area indicated a for- Professor Slosson explained that cidently rammed his knee in the department of justice has been in- midable task awaited government often men of force who could ade- "Old man's" back during the block- vestigating the selling of stocks troops. quately administer public offices are ing demonstration. As a result, the short and there was no confirma- Kiukiang advices revealed Com- defeated in elections because they dean of America's football coaches tion of this at the department. It munist depredations in Kiangsi make enemies readily and their was forced to go to bed. it known, however, that the ques- province continued practically un- "personal popularity" is not great tion of short selling has been abated and additional up-river dis- enough to carry an election. Recovery of Gridders brought tothe attention of the patches said the Reds seemed to bess president since the recent deflation shifting their major headquarters Kingsford-Smith!sndd o of the stockmarket. from Hunan provice ito Kiangsi. nI dyhmLands But if there is any intention of province_____intin o Homn 13 v Associated Press) governmental interference with the I CAMBRIDGE, Mass., Oct 14- stock exchange there has not been Areasures Qi Aersian (BY Associated Press) Harvard's hopes for a victory over the slivhtest .intimation of it in A^""a D-. I r I LONDON. Oct. 14.-Dispatches to Armv on Saturdav :nared hit to- Prof. Clara J. Allison, of the Latin department of Michigan State Nor- I.-