ESTABLISHED 1890 CIIl.r Itv a 1111 MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN VOL XLI. No. 84 EIGHT PAGES ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 21, 1931 PRICE FIVE CENTB sk DUANTRPLE WITH CHALLENGE11 1 OR CODIFFE Special Wire to Daily Contains Retort of Lecturer. ASKS FORDEBATE Condliffe Declines to Defend His Opinion of Author. Will Durant, lecturer and au- thor, in a wire to The Daily last night, answered the attack of Prof. John B. Condliffe, of the economics department, made at a meeting of the American Asso- ciation of University Women, an account of which ran in The Daily last Sunday. In his communica- tion to The Daily, Durant chal- lenged Professor Condliffe to de- bate Thursday night at the time scheduled for the lecture, who, in a statement given out last night, declined the offer. The telegram read in part as follows: Book Based on India. "At your request I should answer Professor Condliffe as follows: first, my book does not pretend to pre- sent both sides of the India prob- lem, but only to be a brief for the defendant, an answer to Miss Mayo. Second, the book is not based upon my stay in India, the brevity of which is admitted in the first line, but upon an extensive study of Indian affairs. Third, if the book expresses emotion, as well as a thousand documented facts, it is the natural expression of an Amer- ican faced with the most horrible exploitation he has seen in all his 4ravels. I make no-ey e-s-et emotion. Does Not Attack England. "Fourth, my book is not an attack upon England or Englishmen but an appeal to them; the book does offer a solution, substantiallylike that which the Round Table Con- ference seems to have agreed upon. Fifth, if Professor Condliffe really believes that I speak without knowl- edge, I invite him to meet me in debate on the subject Thursday evening in place of my lecture. My book has naturally displeased per-' sons of British affiliations, but you will notice that not one of them has ever answered its contents. Sincere- ly, Will Durant." Professor Condliffe, when inter- viewed last night, said that he would decline the invitation to de- bate. He did not see how any such lecture or debate could help India to the solution of her problems. He had always believed Durant to be sincere and disinterested; but the presentation of a one-sided case either by Miss Mayo or Mr. Durant was not, to his mind, the right way to give practical, con- structive help. The fact that the Round Table Conference had come to a solution substantially in agree- ment with Mr. Durant's ideas prov- ed that responsible Englishmen did (Continued on Page 2) State Bulletins (y Assocaed Press) January 20, 1931 LANSING-A statement made to the city council last night showed that the welfare fund has a deficit of $46,000. The city has spent $110,- 952 in welfare work with a budget of only $25,000 for the fund. GRAND RAPIDS-Gertrude Cain, 15-year-old Central high school student died of a heart attack here Monday evening. The attack, which is thought to have been brought on by worry over her studies, struck the girl while she was in a store. ADRIAN-Sylvia J a n e Perkins, eight-year-old daughter of Rev. W. H. Perkins, was injured when the family car, driven by her father, crashed into the side of a gasoline1 car at the Cincinnati Northern railway crossing two miles north of Hudson. PROHIBITION COMMISSION REPORT FINDS FAVOR OF PROF. J. D. POLLOCK 18TH Statement of Commission Seen as Failure by Professor Steiner. Beach Conger, Jr., '32. Two different views were taken by members of the political science department on the Wickersham re- port in interviews with The Daily last night. "I am very much im- pressed with the quotations from the report of the Wickersham Com- mission which I have seen," stated Prof. James D. Pollock. "The com- mission has rendered a construc- tive report which I trust will be carefully studied and acted upon by Congress. "It is satisfying," he continued, "to read from such a competent body that prohibition has accomp- lished something, and that the wise procedure in case a change is de-~ sired, would be to revise the Eigh- teenth Amendment and not repeal it. The suggestion from the major- ity to give prohibition a further trial with increased enforcement facilities, and under better legal conditions, seems toume to be sound and sensible. I should be pleased to have public sentiment on prohibi- tion tested in the manner suggested by the Commission. The result wolud be nothing but healthy and would clear the atmosphere and possibly lead to a change in the legal status of prohibition. "Altogether, I think that the WORK STARTS SOON ~ON SEWERPROJECT Job Will be Started in Three Weeks; Probably Will Take More Than Year. The United Construction com- pany, contractors in the new city sanitary sewer project, will proba- bly begin work on the construction job within three weeks, George, Sandenburgh, city engineer, stated yesterday. The number of men to be em- ployed on the project depends up- on the number of operations the contractors carry on at one time, Sandenburgh said. If three section gangs are used, thetnumberem- ployed will probably total 75, while one section would employ only about 25 men. The engineer did not express much hope that the job can be finished in less than a year. Last-minute changes in the plans of the board of public works re- suited in the adoption of an alter- nate route which will be followed by the new sewer in preference to the original board plans, for the purpose of keeping the sewer route on city-owned property. While it was originally thought that such a route would cost the city at least $15,000 more, further investigation revealed that rerouting would cost little more than $4,000. ATTACKEDONHROD Struck With Sand Bag When He. Stopped for Red Light at Road Intersection. August Harnack, a Ypsilanti deal- er in antiques and furniture, was attacked by two men as he stopped at the intersection of the Ecorse and Telegraph roads last night in his Dodge sedan. Harnack had halted for the red light and was waiting for it to change when the two robbers came up from behind and struck him over the head with a sand bag. The attackers got into the car and drove off, threatening Harnack with a gun. After traveling along U. S. 112 for some time and continuously taunting him, the men finally threw him out of the car just out- side of Ypsilanti, and continued on down the highway. Harnack was uninjured during his experience except for a bruise on his head and immediately tele- phoned the sheriff's office from a farm home. The sheriff and state police are on the trail of the at- tackers. Ruthven to Give Talk to Rotary Club Today commission deserves credit and I commendation for furnishing us urrUI with constructive proposals for leading us forward and not back- ward in the matter of prohibition. The proposal to repeal the Eigh-0 T teenth Amendment and to restore state' control of liquor has always Supreme Be left me cold, and I am gratified to y of learn that the Commission has of Tp f fered constructive solutions - not. tof reactionary ones," he concluded. Dr. H. Arthur Steiner said: "In DEFENDI the Wickersham report, we find recommendations for the m o r e Solicitor G stringent enforcement of prohibi- tion legislation in spite of the ad- Prese mitted lack of public support. From their report, one gathers that the members of the Commission ad-f (1y hered to the fixed ideas they had WA IN when appointed to theCommission . aN Apparently their investigation ha day battle been so conducted that, disregard- Supreme Co ing plain evidence of the displeas- the citadel o ure of the majority of the Ameri- teenth Amer can people, they have preferred to tuin A impose upon us a re-statement of tution. the situation that would do creditl The Supre to the Anti-Saloon league and sim- this time ha ilar extremist organizations. the amendm "The disappointing report had will hear been accurately forecast at the and opposing time the commission was appointed. Judge Clark Predominantly Republican and dry it invalid. in its composition, the Commission Attacki: has submitted a report which is The attack equally Republican and dry. $500,- have a weap 000 has been spent in order that which has be the American public might be in- and will be a formed that "there is yet no ade- bulwark. quate observance or enforcement" Defending of the prohibition act. After twelve fidence, decla years of experience with prohibi- which will b tion legislation, in a country which and defeat w prides itself upon the popular basis When Wil of its government, we learn that William J. H "public opinion in the s e v e r a 1 fore JudgeC states" should be, but is not, on the possessingo dry side." half-barrelsc indictment Eighteenth A because rati ,009 gTIC SOCITY itures instead Thatcher Si SRI Solicitor G erly a distri City, is tor supportingI Play Production to Open Noted aifmendment, Cohen and Humorist's Comedy Tonight heard in op: at Lydia Mendelssohn. Since Judg -sion on Dec. "Rebound," a comedy by Donald trict judge Ogden Stewart, noted humorist, court of appe will be presented by Play Produc- cisions susta- tion for the first time at 8:15 o'clock tonight at the Lydia Men- delssohn theatre. The show will be' given the remainder of this week. ST TE Tickets may be obtained from 10 o'clock on at the box office. Included in the cast are many,; O E students who have had prominent parts in campus dramatics. Among Past Polici them are Eugenie Chapel, '32, Harry Allen, Grad.; and Janet Woodman- Chang see, '32. Ex The sets have been designed and executed by the stagecraft classes (By under the direction of Allen, and LANSING, AMENDMENT INTS RENEW ench Promised Newer Arguments in Fight Begin Again. NG FORCE ALERT eneral Thatcher Will nt Side of The Defense. Associated Press) TON, Jan. 20-An all- will be waged in the curt tomorrow around f prohibition, the Eigh- ndment to the consti- TURNS IN REPORT TO CAPITOL HILL PROHIBITION REPEAL; CONGRESS RECEIVES WICKERSHAM REPORT President Avoids Any Reference to Vote of Six of Eleven Commissioners for Repeal or Modification of Prohibition. (By Associated Press) (See Page 2 for Report Summary) WASHINGTON, Jan. 20. - The long debated report of the Wickersham commission, broadly upholding the constitutional pro. hibition amendment but leaving the door ajar for basic revision, was put on the crowded calendar of the divided Congress today by President Hoover. The president agreed with the commission that the dry amend- ment should not be repealed. He disagreed with a suggestion that _ - revision might be the better part of wisdom. He pointed out to the George ,W. Wickersham, Chairman of President Hoover's me Court which up tolaw enforcement commission, who as consistently upheld has at last made his report as head ent against all attack, of the committee regarding the arguments supporting Eighteenth Amendment after a g the recent decision of twenty-month investigation period., of New Jersey holding He urged strongly that the Amend- ment should not be repealed under ng Forces Ready. any consideration. king forces claim they on new to the warfare een waging for 11 years, able to batter down the forces, with equal con- PI1IIR TRI are the battering rams be used are not new, will attend the assault liam H. Sprague and J Newest Forensic Organization owey came to trial be-) Wins Decision Over Oldest Clark on a charge of . and transporting 50' in Their Initial Debate. of beer, he quashed the on the ground the Sigma Rho Tau, engineering de- kmendment was invalid, bating society, successfully upheld ified by state legisla- j the negative side of the question: d of state conventions.IResolved: "That the United State upports Amendment. R " hd eneral Thacher, form- I should own and operate the Muscle ct judge in New York Shoals project," last night in their present the argument initial debate with Adelphi, House the'- validity of the j of Representatives at the League._ while Julius Henry This debate was the first of a Seldon Bacon will be tentative annual series of debates position. between the youngest and the old- e Clark's famous deci- est of the forensic societies on the 18 another federal dis- campus. and a federal circuit The speakers for each of the or- eals have rendered de- ganizations, in the order of speak- aining the prohibition ing, were as follows: Adelphi, E. against similar attacks.'Jerome Pettit, Spec.; Victor Rabin- owitz, '31, Nathan Levy, '31; Sigma Rho Tau, Vernon C. Praschon, E; SCEarl C. Briggs, '33E; and Leo F. IBrown, '32E. Registrar Ira M. Smith acted as chairman and the judges were as ollows: Mr. J. W. Parker of the Detroit Edison Co., Professor Court- x SCORES REPORT x R (PAy ssocrated Press) CHICAGO, Jan. 20. - "More hooey, more delay, no action" was the comment drawn from Mayor William Hale Thompson of Chicago by the Wickersham report today. S"Great Britain," he added, "is getting rich selling the Ameri- can people rotten booze at three times its worth. I am glad the commission is positive about one thing. They are against the saloon. Every schoolboy knows that is the sentiment of the na- tion. Everybody knew it 10 years ago. Well, the commission de- cided something." WELLS TO DELIVER 'TALK HERE_1'TONIGHT. Noted Explorer to Make Malay Jungle Subject of Speech at Hill Auditorium. Carveth Wells, fellow of the Roy- al Geographic society, will lecture at 8:15 o'clock tonight in Hill audi- torium on "Six Years In The Malay Jungle." His lecture is one of a series sponsored by the Oratorical association. He will also show sev- eral reels of motion pictures. Wells has been soldier, writer, explorer, naturalist, riveter a n d railroad builder. He and Lincoln Ellsworth were on the same rail- road survey years ago far north in Canada. Shortly after the outbreak of the World war he was sent into the Malayan peninsula to survey a railroad right-of-way through the jungles. Held there by the war, he stayed there six years. Since the war, Wells headed an expedition to Lapland for t h e American museum of natural his- tory. He secured the only motion pictures of the Lapland lemming, and presented four specimens to a museum in this country. He also made a special study of the Bermu- das at the request of the govern- ment there. HERZBERT HOOVR law makers that all the commis- sioners favored large expansion of enforcement facilities, and said he hoped Congress would con- sider that at some appropriate time. Mr. Hoover made no direct reference to the fact that six of the 11 commissioners asked for es to be Radically ed Relative to penditures. Associated Press) repeal or modifi- cation. Nor did he mention the statement by the whole commission that a revision to give concurrent power to the state and nation would be wise. The arrival of the report on cap- itol hill set off explosions there that promised to be heard in the right Df Detroit City College and Mr. James H. McBurney of the University. Communists and Police B a t t l e in Metropolis Jan. 20.-The new ad- 11 r- I one of them is extremely modern- ministration burrowed deeply into (By Associated Press) istic in design. All of them are NEW YORK, Jan. 20.-Police and "lavish," according to Valentine B. the state's financial problems to- communists fought again today. It Windt, director of Play Produc- day. In a series of conferences, de- was in the shadow of the city hall, tion. cisions were made which may radi- where the communists had gone BRIDGE TOURNEY WILL START SOON Registration Will Open Today for All-Campus Meet. Registration for an all-campus bridge tournament will be opened at the Union today and will con- tinue until the close of the present semester. The tournament will pro- vide competition for independents and fraternity men as well and two cups will be given to winners and runners-up. Last year more than 100 bridge players on the campus played in the elimination series, the cham- pionship match being witnessed by a large crowd of card enthusiasts. Two large cups will be given to each man in the winningvteam, while a pair of smaller trophies have been secured for losers in thel title contest. Fraternity b r i d g e tournaments are being planned but as yet no official announcement has been made concerning registration or date of the first round matches., First games of the all-campus meet' will be played during the first week in the second semester. Michigan Professors to Attend Convention Four representatives of the medi-, cally change past policies relative for a dole. Some were knocked to expenditures and administrative board grants. Conservation outlays, it was decided, are to be more close- ly scrutinized. State departmentsrand institu- tions must hereafter remain within their legislative appropriations. The granting of "emergency" appropri- ations by the administrative board for purposes which are not actual- ly emergencies, is to be discontinu- ed. It was claimed the changes will end fund juggling, save hundreds of thousands of dollars, and make state book-keeping more under- standable. Governor Wilber M. Brucker toss- ed the budget tangle into the lap of the finance committee of the state administrative board, with in- structions to analyze the figures and determine the actual general fund shortage. T h e committee's findings upheld the deficit reported' in the budget prepared by former Governor Fred MI. Green. It re- ported to the administrative boardl that the deficit in the general fund at the end of the current fiscal year will be $4,688,683 which is the figure named by Green. The committee also agreed with Gov. Brucker that aside from theI actual deficit, emergency continua- tions for continuing construction on the new Jackson prison and the Ionia reformatory will be needed, and that the last legislature failed down. Some were arrested. Police were doused with water. There were instances in which officers and spectators were blackjacked.f next election. Senator Borah, of Idaho, an ad- vocate of prohibition, said repeal or no repeal of the Eighteenth Amendment was the issue and de- manded that it be taken to the people. " I should like to see those op- posed to the Eighteenth Amend- ment present their alternative and let the people choose between them in an orderly and proper fashion," he said. Blaine Introduces Resolution. Senator Blaine, Republican, Wis- consin, an opponent of the dry law, introduced a resolution for a substitute prohibition amendment similar to that the commission out- lined. His proposal would giveCon- gress the power to regulate liquor traffic but not to prohibit. Chairman Norris of the Senate judiciary committee said he ex- pected no action by it at this ses- sion, although he would name a sub-committee to study the Blaine proposal if the Wisconsin senator desired. With the report went the letter of President Hoover. The president briefly reviewed the personnel of the commsision and the scope of its 18 months study. He reviewed the general recom- mendations for improvement of en- forcement machinery, and said : "The commission by a large ma- jority does not favor repeal of the Eighteenth Amendment as a method of cure for the inherent abuses of the liquor traffic. I am in accord with this view." Professors to Attend New York Convention Prof. Clarence P. Johnston and Prof. Clifton O. Carey of the geo- desy and surveying department, left last night for New York City to attend the annual conventioh of the American Society of Civil Engi- neers. Professor Johnston is direc- tor of the division of surveying and mapping of the society, and Pro- fessor Carey is the chairman of a special committee on the third and fourth order triangulation a n d traverse. Hoover Will Participate in MemorialDedication (By Associated Press) WASHINGTON Jan 90 -Pvresi FUTURE TEACHERS ARE NOW QUIZZED BY PUPILS IN SUPERVIZED CLASSES University High School Students cures valuable data by coaching Question Education Seniors., delinquent students, aiding in li- brary work, and occasionally in di- Frank B. Gilbreth, 133. recting the class. He may at any time be called Seniors in the School of Educa- upon, however, to answer questions tion probably wish that they had about the assignment and lie is worked a little harder when they graded for his answers much the were in high school because now shih scho che were enrolled mthe they are expected to prepare the idsnolycohispg lessons assigned to the classes of aids the faculty of the education the University High school everyash fiugingftheenio day. In case they fail to prepare school Pudging their seniorshbe- these studies they may have the chePrdfornDats"thtwo embarrassment of being called on they had found thatssrthose who and being laughed at by a room full made good in the classrooms were of high school students who are almost always successful teachers." greatly elated to find that the as- mNow, those who intend to gradu- sisan techr ddnt sud hi is-ate must take an examination on sistant teacher didn't study his les February 14 covering this practical son. knowledge that they have obtainedi All this has been caused by the in the high school classroom com- desire of the officials of the School bined with the more theoretical of Education to graduate a group of work of the required courses. These students who will raise the stand-; include education psychology, his- ards of the teaching profession. tory and philosophy of education, They have found, according to principles of teaching, organization Prof. Calvin O. Davis, Secretary, and management of secondary that the best way to accomplish schools, and methods. This will be this is to give the seniors of the the first time that an examination