rABLISHED 1 890 }~J Ai 4* 4tZtr ta 4 a113 i MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS No. 6 EIGHT PAGES ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1931 PRICE FIVE Cl R SIT SET, FOR SE so OP E E ithven Defends Reputation of American K ITS AT CRITICS OF STUDENT LIFE AT UNIVERSITIES President Gives Speech Before Education Association. ANSWERSLITTLE Upholds Co-Education; Auto Not an 'Evil, But a Problem. By Karl Seiffert. SAULT STE. MARIE, Oct. 3.-A spirited reply to critics of American colleges came from President Alex- ander G. Ruthven last night when e answered charges that "auto- mobiles, liquor, and co-education" are common evils prevailing on the campuses of American colleges. Upholds Co-Education. "If it is a matter of degree of wickedness or amount of time de- voted to riding, drinking, and dat- Ing," President Ruthvent declared In an address to the Michigan Edu- cation association here, "then it may be appropriately asked if it hs been shown that men and women in co-educational institu- tions give more thought or time to each other than do those students who attend other colleges; or if the reckless driving of automobiles, the drinking synthetic gin, or the For Complete Text of Speech See Page 3. combination of these activities in the form of 'wild parties' is any more frequent in co-educational schools, in fact in any college, than In most towns at the present stage In our civilization." To the question regarding the extent to which the college shall adopt a parental attitude toward the student, the President replied: "Independent 'thinkers in the student body, theorists, and smart critics to the contrary notwith- standing, the answer is 'to the ex- tent demanded by parents."' Answers Dr. Little. President Ruthven's analysis of college evils was precipitated by an address by Dr. Clarence Cook Little, former president of the University, who attacked the "three evils of American colleges" in a lecture at Columbia university last summer. Declaring himself opposed to the segregation of the sexes in college, President Ruthven said: "One may argue with cogency that if the presence of one sex is a disturbing factor to the other in college, it will be well for both to learn to study in spite of the dis- turbing element. We have two sexes, neither of which can be eliminated, and it is logical to conclude that (Continued on Page 2) state Bulletains (By Associated Press) October 2, 1931 DETROIT-William H. Traube member of a prominent Detroit jewelry firm for the past 36 years, died at his home in Bloomfield Hills today. He was 57 years old and secretary-treasurer of Traube Bros. & Co. MUSKEGON--The Peoples State bank for savings failed to open for business today. The bank has to- tal resources of $3,068,480, deposits of $2,286,938 and capital of $300,- 000. PORT HURON-A 40-foot gaso- line launch with a crew of three, feared lost in lower Lake Huron, was found today near Lexington, all hands safe. A 24-hour search had been conducted for the craft. Lindberghs Ducked in Yangtse River While Taking off on Flood Survey HANKOW, China, Oct. 2.-(0P)- Charles and Anne Lindbergh and Dr. P. Z. King, Chinese flood relief worker, escaped drowning in the Yangtse RiXer today, but were thor- oughly ducked as the Linberghs' black Lockheed monoplane over- turned in the swirling and muddy waters while turning preparatory to taking off. The accident halted the Lind- berghs' flood relief surveys, upon which they have been engaged as volunteers ever since their arrival in China two weeks ago. Their plane rested tonight on the deck of the British aircraft carrier Hermes, its wing broken. The Her- mes will carry the plane and its owners back to Shanghai, sailing at 10 a.m. Saturday. There an expert will put the machine in shape for the next stagy of the Lindberghs' aerial vacation. The Hermes will reach Shanghai probably e a r 1y Tuesday. The Lindberghs were to make an observation flight of the Tungting Lake Region, 110 miles southwest of here, in an airplane. One end of the wing struck the water as the flying craft turned in the swift current, capsizing it and throwing the three passengers over- board. The Hermes' crew worked fast. In a short time they had hauled the Lindberghs and Dr. King out of the river. Their survey flights in the flood areas, hailed by the National Flood Commission as of the utmost value to the commission and the Chinese nation, were virtually completed. Their Second Accident. NEW YORK, Oct. 2.-(P)-The upset of Col. Charles A. Lindbergh's. plane in the Yangtse River today marks the second time the famous "We" couple have been in an acci- dent. At Valbuena Field in Mexico City in February, 1929, Col. Lindbergh and the then Anne Spencer Mor- row capsized as they landed their monoplane, which had lost a wheel in the air. i RAPP WILL HEAR NEGO'SCHARGES Prosecutor, Bilitzke Will Go to Marquette for Blackstone's Story of Killing. After listening to Catherine Kel- ler's testimony until 4 o'clock in the afternoon, Prosecutor Albert J. Rapp and -Asst. Atty. Gen. Edward A. Bilitzke left for Marquette prison yesterday to hear David Black- stone's story about another Ypsi- lanti killing, recessing Judge George W. Sample's one-man grand jury until Monday afternobn. Miss Keller was the only witness; before the jury yesterday, complet-; ing the testimony she began Thurs- day afternoon. She had waived all rights of immunity to testify, and seemed not at all hesitant about talking. Continued refusal of Mrs. Anna Odem, wife of the Ypsilanti Negro speakeasy owner, to testify ended disastrously for her. She had been held in jail for two days under threat of a contempt of court sent- ence. Still silent yesterday, she was arraigned on a liquor law violation charge, pleaded guilty, and was given one to two years to think, things over in the Detroit House of Correction, with the minimum term recommended. - Evidence on the prohibition viola-l tion had been obtained previously, and is thought to have been heldj over Mrs. Odem's head as a threat if she remained stubborn. Fear of, implicating her husband further may have led to her attitude. Examination of Judge Curtiss' body will not be completed for more than a week, but the jury will re- convene Monday after Judge Sam- ple has spent the morning assigning cases for the fall term of circuit court. Miss Keller's trial on an accessory after the fact indictment is the last case on the criminal docket, but may be moved up at the prosecut- or's request. The present investiga- tion is to determine whether she shall also be indicted as a principal in the murder.I Three other complaints have been brought- before the jury, Judge Sample said yesterday. Rumors have been widely spread that they con- cern malconduct in public business by Washtenaw county, Ann Arbor, and Ypsilanti officials. Cyr Is Planning Suit to Oust Huey P. Long BATON ROUGE, La., Oct. 2.-(/P) -Lieut. Gov. Paul N. Cyr announc- ed today he intends to take the oath as Governor of Louisiana and file an ouster suit against Gov. Huev P. Long. challenging Long's BRITAIN APPROVES NEW BUDGET ACT Snowden in Fine Fettle as Labor Party Fails; Election Due by End of Month. LONDON, Oct. 2. - (1P) - Philip Snowden hobbled to-the rostraum in the House of Commons this after- noon, poured his sarcasm upon the Labor opposition, ignored the boos and hisses from the Labor benches and cast his vote with the govern- ment majority to pass the finance bill which puts the supplementary budget into effect. It was probably his political swansong, for there is a general agreement now that there will be an election before the end of the month with Ramsay MacDonald heading a national government ticket against the Labor opposition which probably will be supported by a certain number of Liberals. Mr. MacDonald left town tonight and went up to Seaham Harbor to speak for the first time since the Labor government fell before the constituents whom he represents in the House of Commons. Not long ago they voted by a nar- row majority that his resignation as their representative be demand- ed. Mr. Snowden was in fine form in' the Commons. His rasping voice shot taunts which drew howls of protest from the opposition and c h e e r s from the government benches. "I'm sorry to say that I cannot put to this finance bill a proposal for the abolition of capitalism," he said. "I'll leave that to somebody else, but I will tell you now that any catastrophic attempt to abolish capitalism will bring far greater disaster to the people than that under which they are suffering now." THOASLPTON, AMEICA'S CUP VETEANPASES Made Five Attempts To Lift "Elusive OldMug." NEVER WON CUP Gained America's Good Will as World's' Best Loser. LONDON, Oct. 2-.(P)-Sir Thom- as Lipton, fine old sea dog and one of the world's great merchant princes, died today at the age of 81 years. The cause of nis death was a heart attack which followed a se- vere chill he caught while motoring several days ago. For the past year his health had been a cause of re- current anxiety. Sir Thomas died peacefully in his sleep. Several old friends were at the bedside but no near relatives, since he is the last of his family. He died without attaining the great objective of his life, on which he had spent millions from a for- tune made primarily from tea-the ivinning of the America's cup, a ilver yachting tro- phy actually worth $500. Instead he's won the epitaph, The world's best loser" and the af- ectionate admira- tion of millions on both sides of the Atlantic. His fifth and last attemptto wrest "that elusive o 1 d mug" as he always called the trophy symbolizing yacht- ing supremacy, was made in Sep- tember last year when the Sham- rock V was beaten by the Enter- prise off Rhode Island. Sir Thomas had pinned great hopes on his green-hulled races and her defeat was a blow to him. He found, however, a great measure of consolation in a loving cup present- ed to him by Americans as a tribute to his Sportsmanship and in his election later to the British Royal Yacht Squadron. The last illness of the famous yachtsman caused cancellation of plans to visit America. His passage already had been booked. When he came to New York for his last race, Sir Thomas was given the customary hero's reception of whistling boats in the harbor and a parade between lines of cheering people to his hotel, after a cere- (Continued on Page 2)- DEFERREDHRSHING INQUIRY LAUNCHED Worden, Inter-fraternity Group President, Surveys Effect of Depression. Dissatisfaction with the deferred rushing system, evidenced in rumors of the financial crises in campus fraternities, yesterday brought the launching of an inquiry by the In- terfraternity council to determine if the continuance of the plan this fall would endanger the existence of the houses. A letter will be sent to the vari- ous fraternities asking them the capacity of their houses, the num- ber living in their houses at the present time, and their financial status. According to Howard T. Worden, '32, president of the Inter-fraterni- ty council, there has been consider- oahlP fciclnnnn +h t' mmio +ho ft h CARHDINALS TAKE[ SECOND;MARTIN LEADSWINNERS Hallahan Leads Team to Victory Over Champions. SERIESTIED UP Rookie Scores Twice as Cardinals Win. Play by Play Account On Page 6. ST. LOUIS, Oct. 2.-(P)-Led by a fleet young rookie qutfielder, John (Pepper) Martin, who, almost sin- gle-handed, shattered the spell of big George Earnshaw's pitching mastery, the St. Louis Cardinals rode to triumph over the World Champion Athletics today on the crest of a sensational shutout per- formance by "Wild Bill" Hallahan. Hallahan, for the second straight year, blanked the champions of the baseball universe, holding them to three singles and winning by two to nothing in a sensational duel with Earnshaw, who tamed all but the ubiquitous and rabbit-footed Martin. , The triumph squared the World Series at one victory apiece, as the warring forces wound up their opening skirmishes in the west and headed for Philadelphia to resume on Monday a battle that again has become a tossup. Martin, a hitting sensation from the outset, ran his total up to five hits in two.days, scored both Card- inal runs as a result of fast base running and gave Hallahan the margin of victory that the gallant southpaw protected in a dramatic, exciting finish that saw the Ath- letics stopped in the ninth inning with the bases filled. Although his change of pace baffled them and silenced for the most part the big bats of Coch- rane, Simmons and Foxx throuih- (continued on Page 2). SPANISH CLAIMNT STRENAT PARIS Don Jaime of Bourbon, Carlist Pretender, Dies Following Automobile Ride. PARIS, Oct. 2-()-Don Jaime of Bourdon, Carlist pretender to the throne of Spain, died tonight at his Paris apartment. He had gone for an automobile ride to Chantilly this afternoon with two members of his suite and was stricken with a heart attack. Former King Alfonso of Spain, with whom Don Jaime recently planned joint action "for the sal- vation of Spain," was informed of his death. Don Jaime, who kept alive his claim to the throne of Spain chiefly by issuing manifestos to the Spanish people from his home in France, died within a few days of his reconciliation with the former king Alfonso. World Series Affects University Broadcast The time of the University radio program for Monday and Tuesday has again been changed on ac- count of the broadcasting of the World series baseball games. These programs will be broadcast from 12:45 to 1:15 o'clock. If the Cardin- als win four straight games the, Wednesday program will also be changed to this time. Wiggin May Get Post TIT .. ', 1 If n Police Battle Horde of 50,000 Demonstrators; Store Windows Broken. GLASGOW, Scotland, Oct. 2--(YP) -Central Glasgow was in wild dis- order tonight as crowds of unem- ployment demonstrators smashed. and ,looted s h o p windows and stores. The outburst followed upon seri- ous rioting last night, with fre- quent clashes between demonstra- tors and police, which lasted until this morning. There was no mass meeting to- night similar to the gathering on G 1 a s g o w Green yesterday, but groups of rioters rushed from store to store, creating panic in the cen- tral section of the city. Colleges Plane to Tow Glider Over Stadium Today A glider in tow behind an air- plane will hop over the Stadium between the halves of today's football games according to an announcement by the University of Michigan Glider Club.' After passing over the gridiron the ship will land in the vicinity of the stadium and will be on exhibition after thehgames. First tests for the season on the ship are to be held at nine o'clock this morning at the Ann Arbor airport under the super- vision of Prof. R. E. Franklin and his brother William Frank- lin. UN'EMPLOYED STAGE RIOT IN GLASGOBW CENTRL [STATE YPSILANTI ,MEE MICHI6AN TODA First Eleven to Sta Ypsi Game; Alen To See Action. SEEK DOUBLE WII Morrison and Expected to On Line. By Sheldon C. Fullerton Once again football is in the and Michigan grid rooters will their first chance to see the 1 edition of Coach Harry .Kipl Wolverines swing into action I afternoon when the Maize Blue tackle Central State Tea ers College and Michigan St Normal in a double header at stadium, starting at 1:30 o'clc T h e Mt. Pleasant aggregat will be a new face on Michiga Varsity gridiron schedule, but the Ypsilanti game the Wolveri will be out to get revenge for scare that Co son's team thi " into them Sseason, when held the Var. eleven to a ' c score on A Labor member of Parliament . M'ichigan squ and 11 others were in jail for par- is expected ticipation in last night's rioting by see some serv the unemployed. Order was re- during the cou stored temporarily after a tempes- Hudson of the afterna tuous night, in the course of which the lineup that will start the Yi 50,000 unemployed men and wo- lanti game is expected to clos men fought with the police. The approximate the eleven that N Labor member, who will be tried represent Michigan all s e a.s tomorrow, is'John McGovern, who Some later changes in the ba was suspended from the House of field will probably, be necessary, Commons after a fracas last July. the line from end to end is expo Mounted police galloped to the ed to be the forward wall uj rescue of the merchants' shops and which Kipke will depend throu routed the looters with a bombard- out the entire Conference seas ment of canned goods, bread, jams Hewitt, entirely recovered fr and eggs. After the trouble was the broken ankle that he susta over broken doors and windows, ed in the Michigan State ga were boarded up, but the streets last year, will be were littered with Zoodstuffs and at one flank, with wreckage from the fighting, for Ivan Williamson the rioters also had eggs, jam jars stationed at the and cartons of lard and butter other end. Last against the police. year's two stellar Crobars, clubs, bottles, hammers t a c k1e s, T o m and hatchets were used as weap- amu els an d ons, broken furniture was hurled Howard Auer, are on police from second story win- both back, while dows and many were taken to hos- two veteran pitals. guards, Stan Ho- zer and Omar La- jeunesse, will be Gandhi Foreseesin their accus- Laseune tomed positions. At center Ki if EnglandJ will have Maynard Morrison, [ "r converted fullback who succee in burning up the conference : year in his first season in the c ter of the line. Huge Mail Fraud Set for Charles Trial Bob NEW YORK, Oct. 2-(P)-The trial of Charles V. Bob, promoter and broker, for using - the mails fraudelently in the sale of Metal and Mining Shares, Inc., and other issues of mining stocks for about $7,000,000 to hundreds of investors, will begin on Tuesday. Ferdinand Pecora, former chief assistant district attorney, moved today as counsel for Bob for an open commission to take the testi- mony of 11 mining engineers in Toronto, Berlin, Melbourne a n d Sidney, Austria; Bolivia, Czecho- Slovakia, Alaska, Los Angeles and in the mining regions of Idaho. The motion was denied. Coach Extends Time P XIM . N 4 1V LONDON, Oct. 2.-(/P)-His hands cupped around a glass of goat's milk, his eyes looking into the re- ceptacle like a mystic reading the future in a crystal, Mahatma Gan- dhi spoke an ominous birthday message to the world today. He is 63 years old. "We do not want to sacrifice the life of a single person to end Brit- ish misrule in India," he said. "But the Indians are willing that the Holy Ganges should r n with blood if that is necessary 2to gain the free- dom so long delayd." His words marked the close of an address expressing appreciation for the birthday party given for him by Left Wing labor members of Parliament and attended by 300 English and Indian friends. While the Mahatma sipped his' goat's milk and munched dates broughtinka picnic basket by his English disciple, Mira Bhen, the other guests partook of an unusual li n - n - - -onel of .tr, - _I _ Minor injuries may make t backfield that will start the Yp game rather a makeshift affair. the present time it appears th Harry Newman will be at quarte back, Captain Sol Hudson at ft and two sophomores, Fay and Eve hardus at the halves. Three these men, however, Newman, Hu (Continued on Page a) Branch Labor Meetinj Fights Internal Strii VANCOUVER, B. C., Oct. 2.-(P Disregarding solemn warnings Daniel J. Tobin, of Indianapo president of Brotherhood of Tean sters, Chauffeurs, Stablemen a Helpers, the Building Trades E partment of the American Feden tion of Labor took steps today chastise dissenters. Building Trades delegates, ho] ing a departmental convention pr