'ABLISHED 1694 Ai1 CL XLII. No. 72 SIX PAGES ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 6, 1932 _ _ _ t; IITISH POLICEMEN JUNO U EDR iNDANUPRISING atel Included Among nt Men Caught Drag Nt. in I ISSUES APPEAL Mahatma, in Poona Jail, Urges Use of Homespun Garments and Spinning Loom. $OMBAY,; Jan. 5.-(P)-The Brit-, hb government began a sweeping undup of India's Nationalist lead- s today under extraordinary pow-' 's to meet the menace to its rule rer thecountry. Vithalbhai Patel, former presi- mt of the Indian legislative as- mbly, ad others prominent in e outlawed Nationalist Congress, ere arrested by police, who moved ickly from place to place.' The government previously had# Mtended to four important cities id to the entire Madras presi-, ency its repressive ordinances out- wing the all-India National Con- ess party, led by the jailed Ma- atma Gandhi, forbidding all con- ibutions to its fund and prohibit- .g demonstrations and peaceful cketing. Congressmen Held. Among those taken into custody ere K. F. Nariian and Nagindas aster, president and vice-presi- ent respectively of the local Con-i 'ess' executive committee. Nari- an is a prominent'member of the arsee sect. Bombay, Calcutta, New Delhi, andt ner, Rajputana. are among thet ties affected by extension of thet rvernment's stringent measures. 1 Calcikta alone 45 organizations ere placed outside the law by the" :tension of theyemergeacy ordi- S hedules for Final Exams Are Finished Tentative schedules for final examinations have been com- pleted, it was announced yester- day by Dr. Daniel L. Rich, diec- tor of classification, who said that the program will be sub- mitted to the Univrsity faculty M o n d a y for approval, after which it will be printed and pre- pared for distribution immed- iately. T h e .two-weeks examination period will begin Saturday after- noon,. January 30, classes con- tinuing until that time, Dr. Rich said. Employees in the registrar's office were busier yesterday than they had been at any time since the beginning of classification, as tardy students took advantage of the last available week to se- lecthcoursesafor the .second se- mester. CONGRESS PROBES ECONOMIC FACT/-S Gathers Data to Aid in Disputes Concerning Naval Program WASHINGTON, J a n. 5. -(/P) - Driving mainly to get beneficial economic legislation into f o r c e, Congress at the same time today accumulated data for guidance on such disputes asaid to the jobless, naval building and Muscle Shoals. The House found work to do on the first routine appropriation bill allotting $125,000,000 to meet gov- ernmental bills. Senate members were free for committee-concentra- tion on the administration program to loosen. industrial and agricul- tural credit. Before long, the group with the $500,000,000 reconstruction corpor- ation in custody reached agreement. Senator Watson, Republican leader, feels }there is a chance for Senate passage tomorrow. Heavy Flood Results From Levee Collapse GLENDORA, Miss., Jan. 5.-(/1)- Twenty feet of levee on Cassidy's Bayou, at the Aubrey Falls planta- tion collapsed today before the roaring Tallahatchie River flood. A sheet of water was sent over the countryside near Albin, south of Webb and north of Swan Lake, in Tallahatchie County. The Yazoo and Mississippi Val- ley Railroad embankment is pro- tecting land on the west side of Albin.- A two-inch rain in the Talla- hatchie River valley last night brought a new peril for 10,000 flood sufferers just at a time when the region, was passing through its sec- ond major flood crisis in three weeks. Ruthuen to Lead Open Conclave on Thursday Speaking on the subject, "The Student and his University," Presi- dent Alexander G. Ruthven will lead the annual all-campus open forum which the Student Christian association will present at 4:15 o'clock Thursday afternoon in the Natural Science auditorium. Students will be allowed to ask questions on-any phase* of the Uni- versity administration and activi- ties. Severals topics of recent dis- cussion are expected to be brought up. Sigria Rho ;Tau. BURSLEY TO TALK ON HONOR SYSTEM ' AT OPEN MEETING; Profs. Moore Also Give TO ASSEMBLE ATUNION Matters Pertaining to Student Duty to Be Discussed by Dean of Students. Honor systems and the standard of student conduct will be discussed by Dean Joseph A. Bursley at an open meeting of Sigma Rho Tau, engineers forensic society, at 7:30 o'clock, Thursday night, in Room 320 of the Union. Dean Bursley is planning to con- sider matters of interest to stu- dents such as the auto ban, dating, fraternity rushing, and smoking on the campus and in the university buildings insofar as they relate to the students sense of honor. In addition, he will discuss the honor system in relation to examinations, commenting upon its present use in the engineering school. Angell Will Speak. Professor Robert C. Angell of the Sociology department and member of the board in control of stutent publications, will open the meeting with an address titled, ""Why the College of Literature, Science and Arts has no honor system." Prof. Arthur D. oore of the de-. partment of Electrical Engineer- ing will reply to Professor Angell in an address titled, "Why the College of Engineering has an honor sys- tem." ' Dean Bursley will then take the floor and deliver the final faculty talk of the evening. Following this, there will be an open discussion during which questions of personal interest may be offered by members of the audience. Al May Attend. Earl C. Briggs, '33E, president of Sigma Rho Tau, who directed ar- rangements for Thursday's open meeting, announced yesterday that if student interest in the discussion seems to warrant, it will be moved to quarters large enough to accom- modate everyone who wishes to attend. The much discussed honor system and its relative merits and defects will be freely aired with a view to future argument concerning its worth. Churchill to Lecture Despite Auto Accident Winston Churchill, British states- man, who was struck by an auto- mobile in New York three weeks ago, has sufficiently recovered to resume his lecture tour of the Unit- ed States, Henry Moser, faculty manager of the Oratorical Associa- tion, said yesterday. Mr. Churchill is to appear, here on the lecture series of the associa- tion on Jan. 27. It ip unlikely that a postponement will be made, Mr. Moser said. The address to be given here will be one of 50 which Mr. Churchill will make during his Stour of the country. He is known as "the stormy petrel of British politics" and has held many important ad- ministrative posts in the govern- ment. and Angell Will Talks Before, ernment mobilized ombat the Nation- lowers of the Ma- their end of the g their boycotst on i obedience to the imprisoned leader. ia jail, Mr. Gandhi iL for the support is of India, urging he, spinning wheel garments, and to JCONSID ERS PLANS FOR FAVORIS., BAND, Isham Jones and Johnny Hamp Orchestras Are Being Discussed. DATE IS FEBRUARY 12 Lowest' TicketPrice in History, Seven Dollars, Is Agreed Upon. Plans for the largest social func- tion of the year, the J-Hop, took definite shape last night when the committee in charge of the dance met in the Union to consider pos- sible orchestras, favors, and decor- ations The Ho will be held from 9 to 3 o'clock, Friday nlight, Feb. 12, in the Intramural gymnasium. Tickets hav been reduced to, seven dollars, the 1owest- price in the history of this affair. They will be on sale at the main desk in the Union lobby where they may be obtained only by juniors until the end of next week. After this time they may be secured by members of the other classes... To Choose Bands Soon. Orchestras that are being con- sidered for the dance are Isham Jones, Johnny Hamp, and several others. The committee will make the selection of the band within the next ten days. Campus senti- ment seems to favor Isham Jones over the other orchestras that have been suggested. As has been customary in the past, fraternities and groups of in- dependents may secure booths, which will be set up on the sides of the dance floor. They will oc- cupy these with their guests dur- ing intermissions. The booths are at the present time being assigned to the various houses. Favors Are Selected. Favors have already been select- ed. They will be imported Floren- tine book covers of-genrine- leather done in various colors and of suffi- cient variety to suit all tastes. They will have, "J-Hop of 1933," inscrib- ed on the face. Balfour and Con- pany, who secured the contracts for these, are at the present time working on them. Decorations for the affair have not as yet been decided upon. The J-Hop committee expects to take this up in the next few days. It is expected that the auto ban, as in former years, will be lifted for the week-end betwen semesters. Last year it was removed at noon on the Friday of the dance and did not go back into effect until Mon- day morning at 8 o'clock. THREE SUSPECTED OF BOMB OUTRAGE Men Admit They Were in Easton on - Night of Fatal Explosion. NEW YORK, Jan. 5.-(IP)-Three men arrested in connection with the investigation in the nation- wide search for perpetrators of the Easton, Pa., bomb outrage, tonight admitted, authorities said, t h e y were in that city the night of the explosion that killed two postal clerks and a bomb expert. - The men found in the lower New York East side were being question- ed at the general postoffice. The arrests were made in con- nection with the investigation of the bombing last week, in which three men lost their lives, and the finding of a dozen other bombs there, and in numerous other cities. The bombs had been sent to prom- inent Italians and Italian-Ameri- cans. The identity of the suspects was guarded closely, as also was the chain of circumstances which4 led to their arrest. From unofficial sources it was learned the arrests were made on information obtained by s e c r e t service men and postal inspectors. They had followed a trail from Eas- ton to Dobbs-Fe ry, where they learned the dynamnite used in the bombs had been stolen. From'Dobbs Ferry, the trail led to a house in Summit, N. J., where it is believed the bombs were man- ufactured. "A,. faculty issue to end faculty issues.', This is the dedication of the Jan- uary number of the Gargoyle. It will make its initial appearance for the new year Thursday morning. "To anyone who feels hurt, we read, "because we have omitted their particular gripe we say that we had something worse to say about all those left out than we did about the ones we used. We just couldn'thprint it, that's all." There is again the "Hmph of the Month." This time it is about the "daughter of a certain professor hereabouts," and there is also a little story about some members of the speechdepartment faculty and a convention in Chicago some time ago. A "Mythical All-Faculty B a n- queting Team," is among the other selections of the issue along with an article under the title, "Profes- sors," which contains some familiar names and some than are not so familiar. "Research," is another of the articles. "All Right, Mr. Treasurer, Pro- duce that Live Stock," one - of the articles under t h e title, "Your Money, Where Is It?" demands. The figures are taken directly from the President's Report for 1929-30. Grantland Rice writes for the is- sue an exclusive statement /to the Gargoyle upon the selection of May- nard Morrison as center for the 1931 All-American football squad and there is a story about the well-' known Dr. George A. May under the title, "Encomia." There ar also articles about, "News," and "The Square Peg," in addition to the regular section of exchanges. Several I nIm an renounce drink. As an act of reprisal against the arrest of the Mahatma and other leaders, the Nationalists decided to boycott the three committees of the Round Table conference due from London late in the month. Late Wire Flashes Tuesday, January 5, 1933 (By Assuciated Press) :,, NEW YORK, Jan. 5. - (!P) - Ely Culbertson's side was 16,835 points ahead in 'the great contract bridge match today, with only 21 rubbers remaining of the 150-rubber, series. LANSING-Rep. Frank P. Darin, of River Rouge, announced today he? would be a candidate for the Republican nomination for Con- gress-from the new 16th district. He said he would advocate prohi+ bition modification. SEATVE, Wash., Jan. 5.-(/P)- After a twenty-year search, 'Mrs. M. A. MacLeod, of Grayling, Mich., has found her son. Mrs. MacLeod revealed that she had found her son, Kenneth Pur- cell, 23, serving a six to ten-year sentence for robbery in the Wash- ington State Prison. FLINT-A jury was selected to- day to try Miss Helen Joy. Morgan, heiress, for the murder of Leslie Casteel, her garage mechanic- sweetheart last' April. CHICAGO, Jan., 5.-(1P1)-A notor- ious bank robber and gangster to- day restored virtually all of the $2,870,000 loot of the greatest bank robbery in history. Agents for the Lincoln National Bank & Trust Co., of Lincoln, Neb., were handed negotiable securities worth $538,000. Gus Winkler, the bandit absolved of any implication in the robbery, has already supplied proof of the destruction of regis- f.ad hnwna, 'Iifh a h a. f 1t 917 - FRESHMEN WILL BE ELIdIBLE FOR WORK ON PUBLICATIONS ON FEB. 17 Daily, Gargoyle, 'Ensian Tryouts to Report at Press Building. Freshmen will report for work on publications for the first time Mon- day,' February 17, at the Press building on Maynard street, it was announced yesterday by editors of the Daily, Gargoyle and Michigan- ensian staffs. The work on the pub- lications is open to any freshman who receives at least one B and three C's in his courses. On each of thepublications work is offered on both editorial and business departments for men and women. On the Daily, freshmen "tryouts" will receive instruction in news writing and routine work around a newspaper office and later in the Voaor wrill h,-a osioynedrpL lar beants Those trying out for the business staffs on each of the three will also receive instruction in the routine work to be dlone and later will be given work in advertising, accounts and circulation. Following the freshman year, each publication gives its sopho- mores certain required work' at which the student will be expected to specialize in and in May of his sophomore year will be appointed through competition to Junior posi- tions on his respective staff. It is during this year that he receives compensation for his work. .Through another degree of con- petition, in his Junior year, the senior appointments are made con- sisting of the editors, business man- agers and special department man- aear& of the publications:., ATHEN A AND AD2LPH I WLL DEBATEk ON INHARMONIOUS CAMPUS DATING