* ESTABLISHED 1890 Ad~Vm. EDITED AND PUBLISHED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN MEMBER SASSOCIATED PRESS VOL. XLII. No. 5 EIGHT PAGES ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1930 PRICE FIVE CENTS MAC S BAT R HEM ' Tals tokF rh me FROM BOX TO WIN! SECOND CLASH 06-1' .i......+. HENDERSON SPEAKS BEFORE FRESHMEN AT UNIONBANQUET Warns Against Standardization, Predicts Radical Changes in Social Structure. George Earnshaw Subdues Cards as Athletics Smash Out Decisive Victory. COCHRANE GETS HOMER YOST AND SIMRALL TALK _________" .. ,Y}...:i Simmons, Foxx, Dykes, Miller Abbot~Showers, Bell, Donohue, Aid Hitting Barrage n Palmer Speak Before 440 Eariy Innings. First Year Men. By Alan Gould With a warning against the dan- A. P. Sport Writer. gers of standardization and a SHIBE PARK, PHILADELPHIA, :. prophecy of a world radicallyf Oct. 2. - Again giving a perfectI: changed in social, economic, and! demonstration of how to recognize political aspects, Prof. William D. old man opportunity and accord Henderson, director of the Univer- him a handsome welcome, Connie sity extension division, spoke last Mack's Athletics subdued the St. night on "Fresh Men for a Fresh Louis Cardinals for the second rIWorld" at the largest annual all-1 straight time and continued to Freshman banqu'et in the history of m o v e rapidly toward another ' the Union. world s baseball championship.b Grove left Prof. W. D. Henderson "We are now in the throes of the off ingheuop engrme, butrad .Director of. the extension divi- birth of a new world," Professor ing considerably more fire-balling ion of the University, who spoke, Henderson stated. He added that to the proceedings BigGeorge last night on "Fresh Men for a this new world would require men Earnshaw shot the redbirds down Fresh World" at the annual all- of a stamina and character that on the wings while his long range Freshman banquet at the Union. was never known in the old world artillery support knocked Charles "which died in 1914." Flint Rhem out of the box and I l ~ l1~~~Abbot Welcomes Freshmen gave the Athletics a decisive tri- 0[ hrAs toastmaster, Prof. Waldo Ab- umph by the score of six to one. He bot, head of the freshman English Play Before Big Crowd.-T department, welcomed the 440 first- Before another capacity crowd of 1Cyear men and stated that the fresh- 32,000 roaring cash customers who L LLI men are the most interesting class contributed to a "Gate" of $152,735, 1 because "they are not yet standard- exactly duplicating the figures for Has No Fear That Fascist Gains ized collegians." the first game, Earnshaw over- . GeWill The nFielding H. Yost, director of ath- powered the Cardinals in decisive em y i reaten letics gave a short address. fashion allowing six hits all to- Economic Stability. Throughout his speech he stressed gether, but only two in the last the love of the game no matter seven innings and bagging a total TO BEGIN LECTURE TOUR what it was. "Work must be play," of eight strikeout victims with his rifle shot speed and baffling curves.A he said, "or it cannot be successful." The only Cardinal run was due NEW YORK, Oct. 3.-Dr. Halmar tion o f th e o as give i- to a homer over the right field wall Schacht, former president of the bert F. Donohue '31 residenof in the second inning by young er .Doou, 3, preien'o George Watkins in his series debut German Reichsbank scoffed today the Union, who told of its origin in oat bat, after which Earnshaw bore at the idea that Fascist gains in Judge Cooley's old house which down and easily trained the St. | the recent German elections might stood on the present site of the Louis flock despite a brand of sup- seriously interfere with Constitu- Union building. Professor Abbott port that fell far below the sparkl- tional government, added to this sketch and told of ing standard of the Mackmen yes- Arriving here on the liner Reso- his experiences as a member of the terday. lute to start a speaking tour and to first Union organization. Macks Get Seven Hits. place his 20-year-old son, Jans, in' Bell Stresses Activities Mea'nwhile the Athletics again a Chicago bank for training, the Merton J. Bell, '31, president of cashed in on every opportunity to German financier said his country's the Student Council, spoke for the score. They collected only seven problems were economic, not politi- various campus activities and urged hits altogether but all of them cal, and intimated that he doubted the Freshmen to take an active were gathered off of the delivery of that the indemnity payments asked j interest in extra-curricular work. Rhem in less than four innings of Germany were feasible. James O. H. Simrall, '31, captain and all of them figured in .the run- Dr. Schacht left Germany on of the football team ,gave a short I makings. election day and professed to be speech for athletics. Again it was the heavy artillery out of touch with the political situ- With a history ana a descriptions that did the damage and struck f ation. He was irritated, however, by of the various campus publications, another severe blow to the hopes questions as to whether the people Paul C. Showers,'31 editor of the IA. S. C. E. BANISHES I Samoc Sets Sail ITWO UNIVERSITIES FOHIVI E for tlantcIo f' s AGVERNOtla