ESTABLISHED 1890 -Admimmohmmmm-a EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS VOL. XLI. No. 41 EIGHT PAGES ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1930 PRICE FIVE CENTS ^'_"'- r I nnrGr' iiaCLBOPN STATE SENATOR P1110 ITO SPEAK HERE I VVLLr~nI 11lII U tL JLdUIV IV!III AFTERNOON,_EVENING PROGRAM Ruthven, Fisher, Higbie, Dale, White, Watson, Dolliver Speak Before Convention; Activities Continue Today. Michigan's Press Club began its 12th annual session yesterday with an attendance which may exceed 250 guests, and with afternoon and evening programs held at the Union. The President's dinner, given the visiting editors through the courtesy of the regents of the University, concluded yesterday's schedule, while morning, afternoon and evening meetings today will wind up a greater portion of the work to be accomplished by the group. Last evening's dinner was featured by an address from Rev. Frederick B. Fisher, D..D., of Ann Arbor, former bishop of India, who stressed the need of intermingling editorial and news matter in the modern journal to bring the level of journalism up beyond the point of mere telling of facts. __ Dr. Fisher followed P r e s i d e n t Alexander G r a n t Ruthven, w h o LEGIONNAIRES PLEDGE spoke on the University and its SUPPORT FOR JOBLESS plans for the future, and Henry H.(I Higbie, professor of electrical en- WASHINGTON, Nov. 13.-The gineering, who told the editors of en-operation of the nearly 900,- the relatl' )n of science to the news 000 members of the American trend. Dr. Fisher was followed by Legion was pledged today to the an illustrated talk from Dr. Walter President's emergency commit- tee on unemployment in its Mosaur, of Austria, whose "Trip efforts to provide jobs for those Through the Sahara" was accom- out of work. panied by pictures actually taken in O. L. Bodenhamer, the national the great desert. commander, assured Chairman Music for the dinner was fur- Woods of the committee, that nished by the girls' glee club quar- "the entire strength" of the tet, and a trio from Sigma Delta Legion was back of the move- Chi, journalistic fraternity. ment. Prof. John L. Brumm, of the jour- nalism department, acted as toast- master at the dinner. Dale Relates Experiences. On of the most highly appreciat- ed speeches of the entire day came at the afternoon session when George R. Dale, editor of the Mun- 200 assembled editors of his fight for freedom of the press w h i c h Communists Arrested Following g a i n e d nation-wide recognition. k Dale, the owner and publisher of a Strike, Disorders in small weekly newspaper in Muncie, Mining Regions. well known for its background as "Middletown" of sociological fame, TWO AMERICANS KILLED dared point out the corruption in the official bodies of the city and, (By Associated Press) with the aid of his editorial col- L, .d umn, became involved in one of the LIMA, Peru, Nov. 13. -Soldiers greatest court battles in history. J w i t h fixed bayonets tonight pa- j Cited for contempt, convicted, de- trolled the muddy streets of Mal nied retrl, sent to the Indiana Paso, the Andean mining town s t a t e penal farm, released, and where two Americans were killed eventually given the mayorality of where rtw American ded illed Muncie by one of the largest ma- and several others wounded in labor jorities in history were but a few riots yesterday. of the hundreds of highlights which Troops were gathered in the bar- Date related to the newspaper men racks at Lima as a precaution and women. against possible disorders arising Other speakers in the afternoon from a general strike called by the session were Lee A. White, of the workers' council after the Mal Paso Detroit News, Elmo Scott Watson, clashes, and a group of communist editor of the Publishers' Auxiliary, agitators, charged with responsibili- Augustus Reccord, pastor of the ty for the disorders were in the First Unitarian church in Detroit, hands of the police. and George B. Dolliver, editor of Three hundred foreign refugees, the Battle Creek Moon-Journal. j a m m e d into a jerky three-car Slosson to Speak. train, piled into this city from Mal Today's features include addresses Paso at intermediate points today. by Dr. Preston Slosson, of the his- They brought some of the wounded tory department at the University, and told the first detailed story to Marlen E. Pew, editor of the "Editor come out of the mining area. and Publisher" magazine, Arthur A. The engineer of the refugee train, Aiton, professor of history, Karl A. a man named Haggard, told the Bickel, president of the United Press story of the Mal Paso battle as he association, and Senator Arthur H. gulped the first food he had had in Vandenberg, of the Grand Rapids many hours. Press.. wThe trouble really started, he said, Tonight's banquet, which will be at La Oroia, a mining town not far held at 6:00 o'clock at the Union, from Mal Paso. Radical organizers is being given under the auspices of had aroused the men there to strike, the University Press club. Aside and when news of this action from addresses and ordinary busi- reached Mal Paso, workmen in that ness, a dramatic-skit by Sigma Delta town threw down their tools. Chi will feature the program. The walkout paralyzed the oowr The three-day convention wv ill1 house which runs most of the close tomorrow afternoon at the smelting plants, and the local con- Michigan-Minnesota football game stabulary hurried an armed guard to which the visiting editors and to the bridge on the road between their wives have been invited as Mal Paso and La Oroia. When a guests of the University. The con- group of workmen attempted to vention is being sponsored by the cross the bridge the battle began. department of journalism at the Before it was over, John W. Chap- University. man, of Chicago, and E. L. Tripary, an American storekeeper, were 1200 DIRECTORIES killed; J. A. Morger, another Amer- OLD ONCA MPUS ican, was critically injured, and the list of wounded included an Amer- ican named Kelley, an Amerian Additional Copies Available at woman, Mrs. Albert Diamant, her 'Ensian Offices. husband and another man named Whiteley. More than 1200 copies of the 1930-31 student directory were sold ARMY-NAVY GAME on the campus yesterday, Fred F. NOT TO BE PLAYED Brace, '32, editor of the book, stated last night. Although the campus sale will not (By Associated Press) be continued today, students may NEW YORK, Nov. 13.-All efforts 4 - +, n hring hant a fonthall elash h- ,. IFHISHMEN TO 11 -WITH SOPHOMOR15 IN 91NNU91 GgMIS Traditional Rivals Will Decide Underclass Supremacy Tomorrow. THREE EVENTS LISTED 1 South Ferry Field to be Scene of Combat; Both Sides Predict Victory. GARGOYLE SALES TO D CONTINUED Authentic Lists of Players for Games Creates Demand. Campus sale of the Gargoyle will be continued today at the Engin- eering arch and in University hall because of the great demand for the authentic lists of names and I numbers of the players for the Michigan-Minnesota and Michigan- Chicago gargles, Bruce Palmer, '31, business manager, announced late yesterday. The inclusion of these lists in the November issue of the Gargoyle marks the inauguration of a new policy. In addition there is the burlesqued program of the Harvard- MichiRan game which contains JUDGE DAY, ROBERTS i, TO ADDRESS STUDENT PEP RALLY TONIGHT Record Breaking Turn-out Expected at Meeting to Prime Team for Minnesota Game Tomorrow. "Michigan Spirit of the Past" will be propounded by two famous alumni to the thousands of students who will assemble for the Minn- esota pep meeting at 8 o'clock tonight in Hill auditorium. Judge William L. Day, '(OL, of Cleveland, and Thomas B. Roberts, '04, of Oak Park, will prime the student body for the Gopher invasion to- morrow. A record turn-out is expected to cheer the Wolverines on '.-o victory in what is the crucial game of the season as far as Michi- gan title hopes are concerned. Freshmen and sophomores will lay aside their traditional "Black Friday" quarrel at the time of the pep meeting and join in the support of the team seeking the coveted conference championship. 1 't'raditional underclasiis rivalry {## pictures of the teams and coaching 1 1 1 I LVLI%,XI L "11 A.111G Will.-II GVIluall1.1 will be resumed at 10 o'clock to- I staffs and greetings from the morrow morning when freshmen 1coaches. ! Gargoyle contains, in addition to land sophomores from all quarters these programs, 18 pages of editor- of the campus, battle in the an- ial matter including notes on cur- Waal fall games at South Ferry S rent campus events and general am Michi- held. Victory will go to the class comment on the local football sea- :e meeting winning three out of five points in son, and a number of cartoons by club this the three events scheduled. Jerry Ellison, '30, last year's editor Final plans have been made by' ,. of the Gargoyle, Alan Handley, '32, both classes, each of whom predict I .Tank Cu tinq °12 anal T.PP Rta- I Arthur H. VandenbR Republican senator fro: gan, who will speak at tho of the Michigan Press afternoon. FRENCH L ANDT Disaster at Lyons MakH Homeless; Causes4( PropertyL ossesR RUINS TRAP RES i t I es Scares Great 4 ')CUERS i (By Associated Press) LYONS, France, Nov. 13.-This ' was a bitter night in Lyons as workmen thrust crow bars under, the debris of 12 ruined homes, half fearful of what they would find be- neath, as the toll of a landslide to- ,day took perhaps as many as 100 lives. 0 As night fell they had 'recover- ed only three' bodies in the xuins along the : Iopo of the Fourviere hill where the ground slid out from under a dozen houses this morning, tumbling them in upon themselves and burying men, women and 'ehil- dren ' Police and firemen hurried to the j vicinity as the first thunderclap of I the catastrophe startled the city. j Twenty--five of them moved una- frai into the ruins to bring out the injured, and were buried under walls which toppled in upon them i without warning. ' About the scene of horror tonight the families of those who were lost, sobbed as the work went slowly along. Volunteers were scarce after that group of police and firemen had perished, and the task of car- ing for the living appeared of even greater importance than that of searching for the bodies of the dead. Engineers called from Grenoble hastily shored up buildings which remained standing in the vicinity; hotipitals near the ruins were eva- cuated as a precautionary measure. The cathedral was opened to the survivors and hundreds of home- less crowded in, for it was the only place they had to spend the night. Cardinal Meurin, himself, who had narrowly escaped death or in- jury many times during the day as he moved about the ruins giv- ing consolation where it was need- ed, supervised the temporary, bar- racks into which he had turned his church. As the night advanced and dark- ness made work impossible, the task of excavating the debris was halted, to be resumed at daybreak. CURTIS TO SPEAK AT MEETING HERE 'Nitrogen Fixation' to be Topic of Yale Man's Address. Dr. Harry Curtis, head of the chemical engineering department of Yale university, will be the i speaker at the meeting of the stud-, ent branch of the American Insti- tute of Chemical Engineers 4:30 o'clock this afternoon in the society chapter room, 3201 East Engineer- ing, building. His subject will be "Nitrogen Fixation." According to the announcement made by officers of the society, Dr. Curtis is an international authority on the subject of nitrogen fixation. He is president of the national re- search council, and was a captain I in the ordinance department dur- duuil_ i.,Ui L'111 ,', .3Z, anu 1,ee Iiia victory for their side. Assembling ser, '31. will start at 9 o'clock for each group; the freshmen meeting at the Union and. the sophomores at t Waterman gymnasium. Last min- M NT CONTHIBUT11 lute instructions will be given by the class captains, as underclass- men are daubed with paint prior TO 10 C. 9. YOUNG to leaving for the field. i Bands to Lead Parade. The class of '34 will be the first Collection for Injured Policeman ones to parade down State street I while the sophomores will follow Will Continue Today. shortly after. Both classes will and Tomorrow. march to the scene of combat be- hind their respective bands. $119.81 ALREADY GIVEN Upon reaching the field, the ( freshmen will take the west side l of the ground for their encamp- Contributions to the gratitude fund for Chester A. Andy Young, ment, facing the site laid. out for University motorcycle officer, whose the sophomores on the east. Spec- right leg was amputated as a re- , tators are asked to stand an either sult of an accident Monday after- the north or south sides of the noon, will be received on the cam- field. pus today. ° A total of $119.81 was The pillow fight is the first event received yesterday for the fund scheduled. Five picked men of which wt be used. to obtain an each class will mount special, artificial leg for the University 'po- horses and attempt to dislodge liceman. their opponent. One point will go Twenty men of the senior class to the class winning a majority of will receive contributions - on the the fights. Falling off the horse campus tomorrow. Fraternities and or dropping the pillow will consti- other organizations on the campus tute a fall. Hands may not be will be canvassed likewise. A spe- placed on the horse for additional cial appeal is being made to wo- support. A time limit of five min- men students to contribute, inas- utes has been set for the event. ! much as they were hesitant in Eleven to Enter Spree. their response yesterday, those in Eleven men of each class also lcharge of the campaign stated last handpicked, will participate in the night. cane spree. Victory in this event Those who have contributed to will also count one point. Five I the fund already are: Fingerle minutes will again be the time limit. "Operated Restaurants, Robert A. The Flag rush, counting three Campbell, treasurer of the Univer- points, will be the final event on city, Walter B. Rea, assistant to the the program. The poles which have Leap of Students, and under whom been erected, will be defended by Young was employed in the en- the freshmen against the attack of forcement of the auto ban, Esther their rivals. Two ten minute per- Wilson. iods will be run off providing the Miss Ruth R. A. Rouse, sec- flags have not been captured be- Iretary to the president, Frank E. [fore that time. There will be a I Tnhhinc QoLio+on+ +., +i-, i 33 GOPHER 'LAYERS ENTRAIN FOR GAME (By Associated Press) MINNEAPOLIS, Nov. 13-Thir- ty-five Minnesota football play- et s, coaches and trainers, left to- day for Ann Arbor, where they will quest for the "little Brown jug" Saturday. Tack Manders and Ken MacDougal,, the Gopher's sensational pair of sophomore backs, looked good in the final practice at home. i f 1931 Football Captain Will be Announced at Annual Union Affair. YOST JKIPKE -, TO SPEAK I __ _ _ . _ .. ..,., t { noDmns. assistant, to MP nrPClflPnt I rest of five, minutes between per !Herbert Watkins, assistant secre- iods to-allow the captains to mar- tary of the University, Edith J. shall their forces for the next at- Smith and Elizabeth C. Wagner, tack. both of the University business of- fice, J. A. Bursley, dean of students, Joe Woodward, 31, and Kasper H. More than 300 hundred sopho-, Halverson, '31, student assistants in mores unanimously elected Harvey the office of dean of students, Bauss, to lead them in the class prof. John E. Emswiler, of the en- games tomorrow at their meeting gineering college, Phi Gamma Del- last night in the Union. i to fraternity, Prof. Clarence D. T. Hawley Tapping, secretary of Thorpe, of the English department, the Michigan Alumni association, i and Edwin A. Boyd, of the engi- recollected hazings of the early ! neering college. 1900's in his talk "Traditions of The response of students in con- Black Friday." Edward McCormick, tributing to the fund in the cam- '32, represented the Student coun- cil and explained the details of the i night by Mr. Rea, who along with game. Albert Donohue, '31, presi- dent the student assistants in the dean's of the Union, introduced Bruce Shannon, president of . the' office, is in charge of the drive. sophomore engineering class, who asked for class cooperation in the L. Illy'. Cook, Professor's games and flag rush. Cider and Father, Dies at Home doughnuts were served after the Announcement of the 1931 Wol- verine football captain will feature i the annual football banquet to be j held at 6 o'clock Tuesday, Nov. 25, in the ballroom of the Union, Albert Donohue, '31, laresident of the Un- ion, stated last night. Plans for the i affair have recently been complet- ed. The football manager and his as- sistants for the coming year will be named at this time. The entire f Varsity team will be guests, of the Union for the cccas:,on, as will members of the band. While no definite announcement ' of the speaker for the banquet has been made as yet, an effort to se- cure a prominent man of interest to ' the students, is being made. Short talks by Fielding H'. Yost, director of athleti tis, Head Coach Harry Kipke, and "Ducky" Simrall, '31, captain of the Varsity team, will conclude the program. Donohue will act as toastmaster. As has been the custom in previ- ous years, fraternities may reserve tables for the members of the house planning to attend the banquet, as may groups of independent stu- dents. Reservations may be made at the student offices of the Union. Ttckets to the banquet, which as sponsored yearly by the Union, may be obtained at the desk in the main lobby of the building. Overcoat Over Plug May Remove Her Guilt (By Associated Press) COLUMBUS, O., Nov. 13.-Lillian Honnald returned a tag today to the policeman who gave it to her for parking too near a fire plug. Coaches, football captains, and players themselves are unanimouui in their opinion of the value of student support to the team. An enthusiastic student body can often supply a final punch that may bV the margin of victory. This oppor- tunity to show the team that the school is with them to a man will be afforded all tonight. Managed. 1904 Team. Both speakers, who are well- known to students and alumni alike through their many appearances at pep meetings, alumni reunions, and graduate dinners in the-past, held important campus positions during their undergraduate days. Roberts was the student manager of the 1904 Michigan football eleven, one of the greatest of Fielding H. Yost's point-a-minute teams. Both have been ardent supporters of Michigan football and athletic teams since graduation. Band Will Play. Calling students and towns eople to the rally with the strains o"The V",tors," and "Varsity" 'Michigan's fighting band will assemble at Mor- ris hall and parade 'down S t a t e' i street and over *North University to the auditorium. The better known Michigan songs, the words of which will be 'flashed on the screen, will be sung by the assembly. The sing- ing will be under the direction of Arthur Hackett, head of the voice department of the School of Music. Another graduate, whose identity has not yet been announced, is ex petted to help Montgomery Shick lead the cheers for the occasion. The regular staff of Varsity cheer- leaders will also be on hand to assist with the leading of yells. PREMIER OF JAPAN WOUNDED BY SHOT Life of Hamaguchi Attempted in Railway Station. (By Associated Press) TOKYO, Nov. 14. -'Yoko Hama- guchi, premier of Japan, was shot and wounded at Tokyo railroad sta- tion at 8:55 a.m. today. Physicians who examined the elderly premier at the station master's office said his chances for recovery were good. The bullet penetrated his abdo- men. The premi er's assailant was cap- tured and identified as Tomeo Sa- goya, 23, a member of the Aikokus- ha, or "Love of Country Associa- tion," a reactionary patriotic organ- ization. The motive for the attack was not clear to authorities. Tokyo station, was the scene likewise of the assas- sination Nov 4, 1921, of Premier K11 Hara, who was stabbed at the main station lobby when he was about to entrain for Kyoto to attend a politi- cal rally. He died in a few minutes. Hara's assassin, Konichi Nakaoka, a weak-minded youth, was sen- tenced to life imprisonment, which later was commuted to 11 years. He is still in Sendai penitentiary. Premier Hamaguchi's assailant apparently is a similar type. Prem>?er Hara prominently figured in preparation for the Washington naval conference. Similarly, Premi- er Hamaguchi contributed largely to the success of the London naval conference. " L7 " " "~ . +_ + ..)\..l Y V<.L L41 Ul.l U11G There was nothing nearby when meeting. Lester N. Cook, .85, 415 S. Fifth she parked, except "a large man street, fabler of Prof. Charles W. I in an overcoat," she wrote. When Notre Dame Consents Cook, of the geology. department, she came back she found a fire to Transfer of Came died at his home late yesterda; plug where the large man had been afternoon following a lingering ill- sitting: Police believe the case will' (By Associated Press) ; ness. be dropped. I SOUTH SEND, Nov. 13.-Notre Dame tonight agreed to Northwest- CSOPHOMORE WRATH WILL EXPLODE ern fer Notreproposal Dame-North- TODAY IN BLACK FRIDAY' FASHION western football game from South 1 ------ Bend to Soldiers' Field, in the in- Traditional Conflicts Between places will be points of contact be- terest of charity. The Rev. Fr. tween the classes. Charles L. O'Donnell, president of Lower Classes Expected But the chance for revenge will Notre Lame, in a letter to Presi- ; to Take Place. come. Today, the freshmen will dent Walter Dill Scott, of North- I be meek and humble and will suf- western, made the announcement Lint For two long months the dor- fer all the humiliation that the l tonight. wrath of the sophomores has fiendish sophomore mind can de- Northwestern, through Dr. Scott, vise. But tomorrow, the classes smouldered and accumlated under yesterday offered to immediately . _ - I , ~___ _ __ meet in the fall games and the Mathematical Society Holds Annual Banquet ' More than 60 faculty members ' n.nd their wive.-, n.ttPndpri the an-