ESTABLISHED 1890 00, AV AIL Vail MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN VOL. XLI. No. 44 EIGHT PAGES ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1930 PRICE FIVE CENTS FA TERNITIES ELMNow VE r - . ,' ,~w 4i Y ~ 1r, F , rUSHNG SYSTEM JONES ANNOUNCES GOLF RETIREMENTI AS MOVIES BECKON, Atlanta Wizard Will Withdraw From All Competition I Next Season. HAS SIGNED FOR FILMS Series of Twelve Pictures Remove Amateur Status of World Champ. to JONES RETIRES FROM ACTIVE GOLF AFTER WINNING FOUR MAJOR CUPS 4 soc' atei Pri Photi Bobby Jones, America's premier golfer, who won the four major golf titles this year and yesterday announced his retirement from active competition in lieu of several movie contracts which he has signed. Jones is shown above with the British amateur and open cups, and the Ameri'can ama- teur and national open trophies, all of which he won this year--a feat (By Associated Press) NEW YORK, Nov. 17.- With a gesture of sportsmanship as dra- mati'c as anything he ever achieved on the links, Rokert T. Jones, jr., today walked from the throne-room of golf. King of all he surveys in his royal realm at the age of only 28, the one and only world conqueror of golf- dom has decided to retire from all championship competition, renoun- cing his amateur standing at the same time, to fulfill a contract to make 12 one-reel motion pictures on educational golfing subjects. Signed Contract Nov. 13. Jones signed a contract four days ago, Nov. 13, with Warner Bros. pic- tures, after considerable negotia- tion, and in a statement of sweep- ing frankness today made known his intention to retire from all "golfing competition of a serious nature," after 14 years of intense tournament play in this country and abroad. In short, business has taken the place of pleasure and recreation, so far as the Jones golf is concerned. King Bobby, after a year in which 7'made a record-breaking clean sweep of all the championships of Great Britain and the United States, has decided the opportun2by to re- pair the family fortunes is not to be overlooked. Intended to Retire. He intended to retire from title tournaments, anyway, he revealed, but had intended to "drop out quiet- ly by neglecting to send in my en- try to the Open championship next spring." Now, however, and in view of the business venture he has un- dertaken, he thought it necessary that a "clear understand'ng" be had by the golfing public that has made the great Georgian its idle since as a youth of 14 he first crashed the barriers of national championship attention in 1916 at Philadelphia. "Of course, the matter of mone- tary compensation enters into the discussion," his statement said. "And it is for numerous reasons that I wish to be perfectly under- stood on this score. The amateur status problem is one of the most serious with which the United States Gold association has to deal for the good of the game as a whole. "I am not certain that thenstep I am taking is in a strict sense a violation of the amateur rule. I think a lot might be said on either side, but I am so far convinced that it is contrary to the spirit of ama- teurism that I am prepared to ac- cept and even endorse a ruling that it is an infringement." Prof. Winter to Give Third Jerome Lecture Prof. John G. Winter, of the Latin department, will give the third in the series of Thomas Spencer Jer- ome lectures, presented by him through the months of November and December, at 4:15 o'clock this afternoon in the west gallery of Alumni Memorial hall. He will con- tinue in this lecture the discussion, begun in the second talk of the serees, regarding "The Life of the People in Town and Country" as manifest in the Egyptian papyri. The lecture room has been changed from room D to the west gallery, owing to the large crowds which have been in attendance at the lec- tures. Mrs. Mary Williams Dies Suddenly at 73 Mrs. Mary Williams, mother-in- I SPANISH STIKERS SHESTON TO SPEAK START RED RIOTS AT UNION DINNER I N C I TY STREE [TS' ON NOVEMBER 25 Council Program W ill Supplement Action of Senate Interfraternity Group Decides on Plan After Consideration ofsThree Proposed MVeasures. unprecedented in golfing history. FISHER WI.LL TALK AT TODAY'S FORUM Methodist Pastor Will Address All-Campus Forum Today on Religion of Life. Wykoff's New to Replace Mark Tolan's (tv A ocbed Press) WASHINGTON, Nov. 17. - A new "fastest human" was hailed today at the National Amateur Athletic Union convention when mercury-footed Frank Wykoff, of the University of Southern Thousands Gather in Barcelona Closing Shops, Theatres and Transit Lines. STUDENTS JOIN CROWD Score Injured in Police Battle; University Closed as Strike Spreads Through Country. (By Associated Press) BARCELONA, Spain, Nov. 17.- The red flag of revolution was raised in the streets of the busiest industrial city in Spain today as thousands of workers walked out. in a general strike and fought with police in the streets, cheering "the republic." Bread lines were forming tonight, for stores had been closed all day. Bakeries had ceased to function, the bakers having joined the strike. Police prepared to man the ovens as the menace of a food shortage appeared. Strike for More Pay. I What had begun as a strike for more pay and shorter work day had assumed the aspect of a ma- jor political, possibly revolution- ary, movement, and the authori- ties were reaching out for commun- ist agitators whom they saddled with the blame for the disturbance. Some 200 were reported under ar- rest. Meanwhile, the strike had spread to other large cities and virtually every section of the country. 200,000 Walk Out. In Barcelona 200,000 factory workers walked out and rioting closed most of the stores, theaters, and cafes. The police had no time today to discuss the number of casaulties, but it appeared certain a score or more persons had been' injured. The university was ordered closed when students joined the rioting. Trolley cars were shoved from the tracks, paving blocks were piled across the right of way, and some cars were burned before the crews joined the strike. POSITION 'TO HOBBS' Geology Head Gets Radiogram From Arctic Explorer in Greenland. Prospects of enduring the four- months Arctic night in absolute All Time Back Will be Present When Next Year's Captain Is Announced. COACH KIPKE .T O'TALK Manager and Assistant Manager Also Will be Announced at Football Banquet. Judge William E. Heston, '04 L, of Detroit, Michigan's all-time all- American halfback, will be the prin- cipal speaker at the annual Union football banquet at 6 o'clock Tues- day, Nov. 25, in the ballroom of the Union, it was stated yesterday by Albert F. Donohue, '31, president of the organization. Heston played four years as half- back for the Michigan varsity foot- ball team and received the distinc- tion of unanimous choice as all- time all-American halfback, He is, according to a statement by Field- ing H. Yost, director of athletics for the University, "the greatest back I ever coached." Father, Son Present. Heston's son, William Heston, Jr., '32, is, at the present time, a mem- ber of Michigan's undefeated var- sity grid team. Heston's subject at the football banquet has not been announced as yet. Announcement of the 1931 grid captain will be another of the fea- tures of the evening's program. At the same time, the manager and the assistant managers of the next year's squad will be named. The entire Varsity team will be the guests of the Union for the occas- sion. Other speakers on the program will be Director Yost, Head Coach Harry Kipke, Varsity grid mentor a n d f o r m e r all-American from Michigan, and James (Ducky) Sim- rail, '31, captain of the Varsity team during the present season. Donohue will be the toastmaster for the ban- quet. Cheer Leaders to Attend Banquet. Among the other guests at the banquet will be the squad of Var- sity cheerleaders who will lead the group in some of Michigan's yells and songs to the accompaniment of the Michigan band. As has been the custom in late years, fratern'ties may reserve ta-l bles for the members of t h e i r housec who are plannin, to attend the banquet, as may groups of in- dependent students. Reservations may be made at the student offices in the Union. Tickets for the banquet may be procured at the desk in the main lobby of the Union building. C. E. Nichols Injured on Black Friday Night California was ollicially accre- How a modern college youth, dited as the first sprinter in brought up amid the complexity history to cover 100-yards in of confused ideals that mark our 0:09 2-5 without starting blocks present-day life, can find, for him- or a favoring wind. Accordingly, Wykoff's mark self a satisfactory religion or phil-1 will go down as a new American osophy of life, will be discussed by record, supplanting the 0:09 5-10 Dr. Fredrick B. Fisher, pastor of record granted to Eddie Tolan of the Methodist Episcopal church of the University of Michigan only Ann Arbhordan Efsomer bihoh of a year ago. The only other 0:09 Ann Arbor and former bishop of 2-5 record that ever before ap- India, at an all-campus forum at peared on the books, even ten- 4:15 o'clock today in the Natural tatively, was that turned in by Science auditorium. George Simpson, of Ohio State, Dr. Fisher will be able to get at last year, a mark that subse- this question of the college atti- quently was thrown out because tude toward religion from more of his use of starting blocks. than one view point having had a great deal of contact with Uni- versity students brought up in TURBINE ENGINEER Buddhism and the Chinese Confus- TO GIVE ADDRESS sion faith, it is believed. The __ speaker recognizes the beauty and wonder of these eastern religions A. R. Smith to Speak at Second and sees great spiritual value in . Engincers Contact Program. them, he says. According to the announcement The second speaker on the pre- of the open forum committee of iminary contact program, spon- the Student Christian association, sored jointly by the electrical en- there will be a second all-campus gineering department and student forum this week on Thursday branch of the American Institute troit attorney, will address the of Electrical Engineers, will be A. group on the subject, "Unemploy- R. Smith, manager of the construc- ment Insurance." tion engineering department and -executive engineer of the turbine ARMY-NAVY GETS department of the General Electric SCALPERS PRICES Company. He will speak at 7:30 @ ___o'clock tonight in Natural Science auditorium on "Production of Elec- Service Tickets Are Expected tric Power." A description of the to Bring $50 at Auction. operation of the mercury turbine will be included in the talk which (By Associated Press) I is to be illustrated with slides. Approval of the deferred rushing system drafted by a special student committee to supplement the deferred residence and pledg- ing regulations passed last year by the Senate Committee on Student Affairs, was given yesterday afternoon by the Interfraternity council. The action, which was nearly unanimous, came after a consider- ation of three plans presented by the Judiciary committee of the council following its revision of certain sections of the plan proposed by the student sub-committee of the Senate committee. The three plans differed in the methods for holding rushing engagements during the first semester, or orientation period. 'The one adopted provides for two "open houses" and dinners once each week during the last seven or eight weeks of the semester. Several minor changes were also made in the plan. _- The more basic parts of the pro- posal were incorporated into the constitution of the council, inas- been left vacant snuce the adoption N of the constitution. The approval of the Senate committee will be re- quired to place finally the provi- sionsinto the constitution. The less Divorce From South Bend Girl important phases of the plan, those LeadstoWithdr l dealingwith minor details, as the eads to W rawa time for holding rushing engage- From University. ments, will remain as by-laws so --- they may be changed if conditions (y A ssociated Press) demand. SOUTH BEND, Ind., Nov. 71.- Program Is Outlined. Matrimony has accomplished what The proposal as outlined is divid- a score of good football teams at- ed into sections dealing with the tempted and failed to do. It has orientation period, rushing period, forever halted "Gallopin' Joe" Sa- pledging, eligibility, and ,enforce- voldi from ripping off touchdowns ment. for Notre Dame. During the first semester fresh- kThe big Italian from Three Oaks, men, except those under hire, will Mich., today was forced to with not be allowed at fraternity houses Mich., todayNwaseforced tos wih except on special occasions arrang- mdraw from Notre Dame because he ed by the Interfraterity council. mrrieednds.ThenwtdraredeFraternities may entertain at open proceedings. The withdrawal ended houses on Tuesday, Wednesday, or his college football career, which Thursday of the fourth and eighth had but three more games ahead weeks of the first semester. Fresh- of it, and removed him from the men may accept invitations from great Rambler backfield. I different houses for the same day, Savoldi secretly married Miss and will not be required to stay Audrey Koehler of South Bend in longer than they des.:e at any par- May, 1929, before he had gained tciular house. - the football fame that now goes Beginning on Wednesday of the with his name. The secret held ninth week of the first semester and until Nov. 1 when his attorney, the continuing until the beginning of same justice of peace who had the examination period at the close married him, filed suit on Savoldi's of the semester, freshmen may be behalf for a divorce. The football invited on Wednesday nights to star's friends immediately urged dinner at fraternity houses. They him to reconsider his suit; fearing shall be invited to visit between the his expulsion from Notre Dame and hours of 6 and 8 o'clock. With the he withdrew the suit. Some of exception of the Wednesday night them told friends and the friends open house, fraternities shall not gradually spread the "secret" un- have more than 10 freshmen pres- til it came to the attention of uni- ent at one of these meetings. versity authorities. Geographical Division Planned. Savoldi admitted his marriage A geographical division of the but insisted he had never lived fratermties into three groups will with his wife and that he would be made which will rotate in regard seek an annulment. The univer- to the nights of entertainment. Dur- sity officials investigated the en- ing the rushing period, which opens tire case, ordered Savoldi out of the Sunday of the third week of the the Drake-Notre Dame game Sat- second semester, a fraternity may urday, and today announced that have three engagements with each ,rdayfreshman. Not more than one en- the big star had withdrawn. a t shall occr n e sam t Letrday. Physicist to Lecture Entertainment of freshmen shall at Colloquium Today be entirely within the house, shall entail-only moderate expenditure, Dr. W. S. Huxford, of the engi- and only active and alumni mem- neering research division of the bers of the fraternity may be pres- physics department, will talk on ent. The system provides that until "The Effect of Electric Fields on a freshman is officially pledged, he the Emission of Photo-electrons," at cannot enter into any agreement or the Physics colloquium at 4:15 promise concerning a pledge nor o'clock today in room 1041, East shall anyone associated with a fra- hysics buidyin.14ternity vist a freshman at his place of residence except in the case of brothers. tBLE ON CAMPUS Official pledging will be governed A T TLE OF CENTURY by rules which state that the fresh- ____ man must present the dean of stu- dents with a list of fraternities he as perhaps the most successful one wishes to join in order of prefer- to play here snce the days of Fried- ence. Following the formal pledging man and Oosterbaan. period any freshman scholastically John Delano, who showed unusu- eligible may be rushed and pledged al skill in open-field running, wa" at any time. the individual star for the losers. Regulations regarding eligibility The game was called because of and violations will be mailed to supper, but hostilities will be re- each fraternity house. At the open- sumed this afternoon. ing of school next fall freshmen will STATISTICS. be given full information concern- G. Hildinger . . .RE.......... Baker ing the rules they will have to fol- Wurster ....... RG.......... Kern low in regard to their relation with Trowbridge . ... C. ...... Ivanhoe I fraternities. NEW YORK, Nov. 17.-Fat wal- lets will be pitted against each other to aid the unemployed in sale of seats for the Army-Navy football game at Yankee stadium Dec. 13. If the citizens committee of the Salvation Army, which will disperse the proceeds of the contest to the needy, can make it so, the game will be the highest priced sporting event in history. Tickets will sale at $50 down to $5, and hundreds will be auctioned off to the highest bidders. A "gate" of a million dollars with another $250,000 in revenues from conces- sions is the goal of the committee. The scale of prices parallels that for the Dempsey-Carpentier fight &.lJ.A.Meeting May Draw 200 JournalistsI Work on assembling the program and arranging for rooming facilities for the Michigan Interscholastic Press Association meeting which will be held in Ann Arbor on Dec. 12, 13, and 14 is progressing under committees of Sigma Delta Chi, journalistic fraternity. Members of the journalism faculty are also working in conjunction with the student group in preparation for the three-day session which will be held at the Union. More than 200 visiting high school journalists are expected to attend f-hcp 1MO ns 'vznmhIlr invrifn, innrq hca.- isolation face William A. Carlson, of the University geology depart- Cecil E. Nichols, '34E, is in the ment, and his party stationed 250 University Hospital today suffering mils, ort ofGodavn Gren-from three fractured vertebrae miles north of Godhavn, Green which he received in the class exer- land, according to a radiogram cises Black Friday night. written in Danish recently receiv- Nichols fell down the steps lead- ed from Copenhagen by Prof. Wil- ing to the basement of Angell hall liam H. Hobbs, head of the geology in the rear. He was taken to the department. Health Service where X-rays show- This northern geology party, ed three vertebrae of his back were comprising the fourth University fractured. Saturday he was re- of Michigan - Greenland expedi- moved to the hospital. Dr. Warren tion, sent a report Oct. 21 stating E. Forsythe, director of the Helath that it had completed the station IService, said it will take three weeks for the back to mend. hut and that everything was go -_______________ ing well except that they had brok- M en the tubes for their radio set, MULTITUDES ASSE which will cut them off entirely FOR FOOTBALL B from the outside world, unless it ---- is possible to get replacements. Hildinger's South Division Street This is considered questionable. Team Trounces Heavier According to the statement of Professor Hobbs, the long winter Opponents. night in this region begins Nov. 4 and from that time on only a More than 250 students gathered small amount of twilight abo n the campus in front of Angell smdaylamountowilihth aboutn alesterday to witness one of the mid-day will allow the ascent of liveliest football games ever played balloons, one of the part's princi- on an Ann Arbor gridiron. ple means of studying the air cur- Captain John Hildinger led a light . t rents. but fast team of nine-year-old grid- ders against the heavier and more ex.-,eriencrl 1forces ocf (Canta~in Rich- II chlandrr ...L ......Dlanom-I