ESTABLISHED
1890
Y
V
all*
MEMBER
ASSOCIATED
PRESS
EDI'TllD AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN
VOL. XLI. No. 48
EIGHT PAGES
ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1930
PRICE FIVE CENTS
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CHARITY
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' STUDENTSPROTEST STRICT RULES
HSITY d \\ d L OF MONTANA STATE COLLEGE DEAN
HUMBLE ALLSTARS ?
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PROMISES TU HEL
INDIANT ATI8nAL
FARCICAL COMEDY
WILL BE REVIVED
P "Rollo s Wild Ohat,' a farcical
comedy by Clare Kummer, wvill be
1ppresented in a revival performance
at 8:15 o'clock tonight in the Lydia
1 Mendelssohn theatre by the Play
j Production department. This is
Wolverine Eleven
Conceded Mri
Over Chicagoans
Alumni Natators Stage Fight
to Win Water Polo Match
8 to 3.
NEW MEN LOOK
GOOD
Former Varsity Men Gain Only
Three First Places in
Eight Events.
By Bill Myers.
Michigan's V a r s i t y tankmen
splashed their way to an impres-
sive win over an Alumni all-star
aggregation last night in the Intra-
mural pool in the initial meet of
the 1930-31 swimming schedule.
The score was 49 to 26. To even
matters a bit, the Alumni swamped
the Varsity team, 8-3, in a water
polo match which followed the meet.
Alumni Take 3 Firsts.
Although there was nothing spec-
tacular about the time turned in,
the sophomores who make up the
majority of the present team came
through in fine shape, winning four
first places and the medley relay,
six seconds, and one third. The
Alumni took the 200-yard relay,
two firsts and five thirds. Coach
Matt Mann was well pleased with
the showing the natators made
against the stars of the past tank
teams.
Walker, 1929 Conference sprint
champion, came through in the 50-
yard sprint to beat the Varsity's
best in Marcus who took second
place. Perhaps the most outstand-
ing event was the 150-yard back-
stroke in which Capt. Valentine of
the Varsity edged out both Spindle,
1928 captain, and Hubbell who held
Big Ten honors in this event. Meigs
of the Varsity also turned in a
second in this event. Condition
seemed to be the deciding factor in
most of the events.
Summary.
200-yard relay-(A) Walker, Has-
mer, Walaitis, Mertz. Time 1:37.
220-yard breast stroke -- Miller
(M) first, Lemak (M) second, Brown
(A) third. Time 2:44 4-5.
50-yard sprint-Walker (A) first,
Marcus (M) second, Walaitis (A)
third. Time :23 4-5.
440-yard free style-Kennedy (M)
first, Ladd (M) second, McDonald
(A) third. Time 5:19 3-5.
150-yard back stroke-Capt. Val-
entine (M) first, Meigs (M) second,
Spindle (A) third. Time 1:48.
100-yard free style-Marcus (M)
first, Schmeiler (M) second, Has-
mer (A) third. Time :56 3-5.
Diving-Walaitis (A) first, 170;
Fenske (M) second, 140, Raike (M)
third, 130.
Medley relay, 300 yards-(Michi-
gan) Meigs, Schmeiler, Smith. Time
3:13.
Totals-Michigan 49; Alumni 26.
Former Dry Leader
Favors Modification
of Prohibition Law
(By Associated Press)
COLUMBUS, Nov. 21. - C. C.
Crabbe, former Ohio attorney gen-
eral and author of the state's pro-
hibition code, today declared he
favors repeal of the Eighteenth
Amendment and the Volstead Act
and mgodification of the state pro-
hibition enforcement code to per-
mit the sale of light wine and beer
under government supervision.
In advocating repeal of national
prohibition, Mr. Crabbe said he
favored leaving the matter of con-
trol to the states.
In advocating modification of the
state enforcement code, he said he
favored "modification rather than
nullification." He said he opposed
return of the open saloon.
Still advocating temperance, the
former dry leader said he does not
"feel that the present prohibition
law had been respected by the peo-
ple or enforced by public officials.
ft has been and is being practically
null fied."
Associated Press Photo
When Mrs. Una Herrick (left), dean of ,women a' rvionaia tate
College at Bozeman, and other officials promulgated a ruling that wom-
en students must be rid of their escorts by 11 o'clock, the students left
their classes in protest. Below is shown a student picket on the campus.
On the right is Leonard Wing, president of the student body, who car-
ried out the plans.
the same play with which Play
MacDonald Assures Delegation Production opened i.s winter sea-
Self Government of India sonal st eee ndt, director, has
Will be Forthcoming. been in charge of staging the show.
- ---He describes the play as being "an
FEDERAL SYSTEM IS GOAL ups oariously farcical c o m e d y"
1which shows a rich young man
sswho ambition is to play "Ham-
Question Now Faing Congress let in a new way, thereby becom-
Is How and When Hopes ing entangled with a company of
Will be Realized in Full. "ham actors."
Among those in the large cast
(By Associated Press) are Alan Handley, '32A, Kathryn!
Kratz, '32, Charles Moyer, '31, Ray
LONDON, Nov. 21.-Ramsay Mac- Suffron, '31, Edward Fitzgerald,
Donald, in words which rang with '31, Franklin Comins, '31, Lynne
hope for India's restless millions, Adams, '32, and Lillian Martin,
today ended the five-clay debate grad.
wh ,h has set the mormetous In-'Tickets are on sale at the thea-
dian round table conference in mo- tre box office.
tion.
McDonald Pledges Support. T
Welcoming the almost unanimous
opinion of IndiaPs spokesmen that
the federal sytem of government Iis
the country's goal, the prime min-
ister once more pledged Britain to'
the prIneipal of its possible self-
government a India as in otherl
units of the British commonwealth. I Pep Meeting Will be Held This
The great question during the ! Afternoon in Field House;
coming week now is how, and more
important to the India delegates, Ex-Captain to Speak.
when that goal is to be achieved.I---
There is an atmosphere of tense Student and alumni enthusiasm
expectancy in St. James palece for the Chicago game will be aug-
when MacDonald rose to speak, and mented at a short pep meeting at 1
the Indian delegates hestitated o'clock this afternoon in the Yost
even to applaud less they miss one field house. Bob Brown, 26, former
of his words. He told them Britain Wolverine captain and center, and
never would welch on any of her Henry Grinnell, '29, will be the
pledges and he referred specifically speakers. The rally will take place
to the Chelmsford Declaration of a half hour later when the varsity
1917 pledging the development of band passes the building on its
self-governing institutions in India. way to the field.
Nationalists Disappointed. Brown,..who captained the 1925
Extremists and Indian national- conference champions, considered
ists were frankly, disappointed with one of the greatest elevens in Mich-
what followed, for it proved to be igan football, will be the first
largely a summary of views which speaker. Grinnell, also a former
already have been presented. football player and active partici-
"The constitution, or federation, ;ant in campus activities, will fol-
or whatever form the future Ind- low with a brief talk. Montgomery
an government may take," said he, Shick, '31, Varsity cheerleader, will
"must meet two fundamental re- lead the cheers.
quirements, it must work, and it Michigan's band will parade down
must evolve. You are not in a State street and the crowd will
position to create a static constitu- foat inebaofthasctopsse ith
tion. As it evolves Indian opinion Fnield house.
and Indian experience must be
more than an initiating power. But Pep meetings in the past have
I give you this word of comfort, been held the Friday night preced-
the case you have presented has ing the football game. Recently,
not fallen upon deaf ears." however, the Student council, feel-
gin that more people would turn
out and that the spirit for the game
would be sustained to a greater de-
b a gree,, approved the Saturday date.
by Tau Sigma Delta, The Field*house wasaselected for
the rally because of its central lo-
Honorary Fraternity cation with respect to the campus
r
t
Veteran Coach
for Chicago
Team,
Despite Defeats
Through
Most of Present Season.
Is Confident
By JOE RUSSELL
Michigan will breast the last hurdle in the long, hard race for
a Big Ten championship when Chicago's downtrodden Maroons
line up on the opposite side of the ball this afternoon at 2 o'clock on
the already historic Stadium turf in a game which will be played for
the benefit of charity. Undefeated this year, and untied in Confer-
ence competition, Coach Kipke's Wolverine eleven have but to turn
back the not too strong threat of the Midway aggregation to claim
a tie with Northwestern for the coveted laurels.
Chicago has played a schedule of eight games this year and has
won two of them, both on the same day against Hillsdale and Ripon
colleges by scores of 7-6 and 14-0. Since that Saturday the Maroon
have been trampled beneath the cleats of every team they have met
with the exception of Princeton and Mississippi, which teams Chi-
____cago tied 0-0 on successive week-
,,ends. Princeton has the weakest
Gas Station Removes team this year they have turned
Bad Lack Horseshoe out in many a season. Illinois,
Purdue, Florida, and Wisconsin
(BY Associated Press> have all taken a crack at Coach
OMAHA, Neb., Nov. 21.-The Alonzo Stagg's eleven and have
horseshoe which was placed over pushed them ever deeper into the
the door of an Omaha filling sta- mire of defeat. None of these
tion has toen taken down and teams have been held to less than
tossed into an ashcan. The ra- 19 points by the wavering Ma-
Sons:rda :"Stti hold~roons.
of Victory
November Issue of Engineering
Magazine Will Appear
Monday.
Hempstead, Director, Names
Stage Manager and Chairmen
of Various Committees.
Articles on various phases of en- David B. Hlcmpstead, jr., '31, was
gineering and architecture will be named director of the Mimes all-
included in the November issue of cawpus Revue yesterday by James
.cesYant, '31, president of Mimes and
t h e Michigan Tech , student general manager of the Revue.
publication of t h e . engineering Yant and 1 Jempstead later an-
school, which will be distributed nouneed the chairman of the other
Monday and Tuesday on the main committees.
floor of the West Engineering Harry L Arnold, '32, was named
building. stage manager for the production,
The cover design for this issue with Frederick Danziger, '32, as as-
is by John J. White, '32A, who also sistant. William Tippy, '31, will be
did the cover for the previous issue, chairman of the financial commit-
and the frontespiece depicting aI tee and business manager; Bar-
scene along theHuron river is by barae Stratton, '31, chairman of the
Lyle F. Zisler, '32A. costume committee; Beach Con-'
Leading the list of the articles ger, '32, chairman of the publicity
is one on "The Chicago World's committee; Charles Moyer, '31,
Fair," by Raymond M. Hood, mem- chairman of the advertising com-
ber of the American Institute of mittee, and Allan B. Callahan, '31,
Architects, in which he describes chairman of the music committee.
the design of world's fair buildings Gurney Williams, '31, will head
:s a distinct contribution to ar- the program committee, Arthur
chitecture. "T h e Pan-American Smith, '31, and Emerson Stiles, '31,1
Highways," by Robert A. Wolfe, will direct the two dancing chor-
31E, tells of the program for con- uses, and Maxine Nowak, '32, will
structing a road to connect the be chairman of the women's com-
North American continent with I mittee.
South America. i The ordei, of skits, dances and
"A History of Steam Turbines," feature numbers for'the program
by Emil T. P. Neubauer, '31E, des- has been tentatively chosen, stated
cribes the numerous successes and Hempstead, and rehearsals on all
failures of ancient and modern sci- numbers have already begun. Bob
entists to put steam to work and Carson's orchestra h a s already
one of the series on "Master Ar- been signed up for the production.
ehitects in History," tells the bio--
raphy of Frederick Law Oln- Chicago Broker-Flier
stead, dean of American landscape JArC
architects. It is written by Robert njured n Air Cras
S. Chamberlin, '31A. (1 -- -
"Vertical Transportation," by PANAMA, Nov. 21.- Captain Roy
Malcolm R. Stirton, '32A, relates W. Aemmel, broker and veteran flier
the story of the necessity of the of Chicago, was injured today in an
elevator in the development of the attempt to take off on a non-stop
modern sky-scraper. There is also flight to the ILnois metropolis.
a short article on Prof. A. H. Lovell, Ai examination by physicians of
recently appointed dean of the en- Gorgas hospital here showed Cap-,
gineering college. grin Amral suffered contusions
about the left ;;houlder and clavicle,
Norris, Capper Demand te spine and the chest, but no
definite fractures were indicated by
Action on Power Issue the X-ray and no paralysis showed.
TI-i paU-ant was conscious.
(y Associated Press) The accident occurred when Cap-
WASHINGTON, Nov. 21. - The tam Ammel was attempting to lift
power issue, government or private the heavily laaded Blue Flash
control was advanced today by two which recently carried him on a
Republican senators fresh from non-stop jump from New York to
victories in the West, as one of the the Isthmus. He roared down the
. .
Formal initiation of six students
of the architectural school and al-
lied arts department into Tau Sig-f
ma. Delta, honorary art and archi-j
tectural fraternity, will take place
Dec. 4 at the Union, Percy Knud-
sen, president of the architectural
society announceu yesterday.
The six who will become mem-
bers are Frederick Schweitzer, '31A;
Mortimer Hawkins, '31A; War d
Swarts, '31A; Floride S a n d b e r g,1
'31A; Gilbert Leppelmeier, '31, andl
David A. Wilcox, Grad.
The speaker for the banquet pro-f
gram has not been chosen yet,1
Knudsen stated, but will be pickedz
as soon as other plans are under
way.
LOCAL THEATERS
PLAN FREE SHOW
Michigan, Majestic to Have
Student Movies.
Several thousand students are
expected to attend the free mov-
ies at the Michigan and Majes-
tic theaters at 11 o'clock tonight
if the Varsity defeats Chicagof
today, Gerald Hoag, manager of
the Michigan, stated last night.
Two rows of seats will be rop-
ed off for the Varsity team at
the Michigan. Campus leaders
will be in charge of both thea-
ters, taking charge of the houses
and the football field.
S. C. A. Obtains New
Books for Opening
of Lending Library
100 current books on subjects of
immediate interest such as history,
psychology, philosophy, politics, re-
ligious thought, and biography will
be made available at a lending li-
brary to be opened Monday by the
Student Christian association, it
was announced yesterday by Fene-
Ion Boesche, '31, president of the
organization.
Theseabooks, almost none of
which can be obtained at the uni-
versity library, have been chosen
by a joint committee composed of
one faculty member, one member
of the Michigan Daily, and a rep-
resentative of the Student Christ-
ian association.
The limit for holding the vol-
umes has been set at two weeks,
and the charge will be five cents
for the first day and two cents for
each additional day. Besides this
a deposit of one dollar will be re-
quired before books may be drawn.
The library will be open on Mon-
day and the room housing the
books may be found just off the
main lobby of Lane hall.
Drawings by Italian
Masters on Exhibition
oubuiudy on ei 1cu up
Monday: Station again held up.
Wednesday: Gas pump broken
and station corner crushed by a
runaway truck.
TO FIGHT_ GANGSTER
Congressman to Seek Measure
to Stop Alarming Spread
of Racketeering.
(By Associated Press)
WASHINGTON, Nov. 21. - Gang-
sters, racketeers and narcotic smug-
glers are to get a dose of preventives
medicine from the lawenforcement
branches of the federal govern-
ment.
Direct Congressional a c t i o n
against the machinations of the
lawless may add potency to the
government's ministrations before
it finishes.
As the customs bureau announc-
ed today it was going to concen-
trate expert narcotic agents on the
Pacific coast to combat smuggling,
a member of Congress said he
would demand legislation specifi-
cally authorizing federal agencies
to harmonize with state and federal
governments in their work against
racketeers.
Representative Woodruff, Repub-
lican, Michigan, has under formu-
lation a measure he will present to
the House ordering direct action to
prevent what he termed "the
alarming spread of racketeering."
"When Al Capone canhgo from
Chicago to California, as the papers
have it, and threaten the life of a
man who is selling grape juice,
something must be done," Wood-
ruff said.
The Michigan representative said
the racketeers received most of
their revenue from the man in a
legitimate business, "and he is en-
titled to protection."
He added that in many cases,
city, county and state officials had
failed to halt racketeering. He
commended Attorney General Mft-
chell for fortifying federal forces
in Chicago for work against gang-
sters.
Engineering Fraternity
Initiates Nineteen Men
Nineteen men have been initiat-
ed into Tau beta Pi, honorary
scholastic engineering fraternity.
Michigan Won All Games.
Against this record compare that
piled up by the Wolves. Wins over
Harvard, Purdue, Ohio State, Illi-
nois and Minnesota should demon-
strate an overwhelming advantage
for the Maize and'Blue. However,
comparative scores mean leas than
nothing in this day of modern foot-
ball, and Michigan cannot feel safe
until the final gun of the 1930 sea-
son is heard and the game is safely
tucked away into the win column.
Coach Stagg, who will complete
his 39th year as the Chicago coach
with the game today has a habit of
winning at least one major game
a year no matter how weak his ma-
terial is, and he figures that today
is his day. The "Old Man" as he
s known throughout the Midway
campus will have his men fighting,
and will have a few tricks up his
sleeve which may make an exceed-
ingly interesting afternoon for the
men of Michigan.
Stagg Hopes for Win.*
However the cards are stacked
against the veteran ,mentor. His
team has neither great offensive
nor defensive strength, and against
a squad which is battling for the
Conference championship t h e i r
best efforts should prove fruitless.
Michigan has a pass offense with
Newman in the game, acid a newly
discovered running attack which
has carried them along when the
passes refused to connect. Also
Michigan is strong defensively. Per-
haps one of the best teams in the
Big Ten in this department of the
game, the Wolverines have allowed
their opponents but 23 points all
season, and some of these teams
have strong scoring plays. Some-
times the ball would be pushed
down the field to the very shadow
of the Michigan goal; but here the
forward wall would stiffen and get
the pigskin on downs, or force an
incomplete pass over the goal line.
Michigan's backs are fast and
should be able to cope with the
(Continued on Page 2)
PROBALBE LINE-UPS
Michigan Chicago
Hozer .........LE.. ........ Wien
Purdum ....... L T... . ... Reiwitch
LaJeunesse .... LG......Hamburg
Morrison ...... C ......... Parsons
Cornwell ...... RG .......Horwitz
Draveling ......RT.,.... ...Trude
Williamson ... . RE ........ Cowley
Newman.4.... ..........Stagg
Wheeler ......LH.......Buzzell
Simrall.,... ,...RH ...... Knudson
Hudson .......FB. ..... Stackler
Petrolle Wins Decision
I Over Jimmy McLarnin
i