Al4 XLII. No.81 SIX PAGES ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, JANUARY 16, 1932 TORNADO LAYS TOWN IN RUINS Michigan Astronomers to Observe WANTS BIG NAVY in nYin ,n Total Eclipse of Sun Next August ".: nrmit PRICE FIVE ir or' T When the tornado, was through with Hamilton, Miss., most of the homes resembled this tangled heap of wreckage which is shown with its former inhabitants. Five counties of Alabama and Mississippi were When the moon fasts its shadow for a brief moment over northeast- ern United States next, Aug. 31, the University of Michigan eclipse ex-j pedition#Fwill be at. Freyberg, Me., to observe it, accord ing to a state- ment by Prof. HeberD. Curtis, di- . rector of the University observa- tory. The expedition is made pos- sible through a grant from the Fac- ulty Research Fund Committee. Besides the Michigan expedition under the direction of Professor Curtis, Lick Observatory is plan- ning to locate also at the small town of Freyberg. Numerous other American observatories will have stations in New England or south- ern Canada. 9r. Curtis will start they work of sdtting up the instru- ments about Aug. 1. While the complete program of research is not yet decided upon in all its details, a number of instru- ments will be installed to use to the fullest extent the minute and a half during which 'the moon will cover the disk of the sun. The larg- est instrument will be a canera of 40-feet focal length, giving large scale photographs of the corona, with the disk of the sun nearly four-inches in diameter. Dr. Curtis is constructing a large interfero- meter which uses etalon plates nearly five inches in diameter, per- haps the largest ever made for this purpose. With this he will attempt to secure further data on the na- ture of the principal chemical com- ponent of the solar corona, which is called coronium, but is probably some more familiar element mas- querading under strange colors. He will also study the "flash" spectrum of the corona in the infra-red re- gion using a grating spectrograph which he constructed while' at Alle- gheny Observatory. Dr. Dean B. 1cLaughlin, of the de- partment of astronomy, will observe the same flash spectrum, but in the visual region of the spectrum. The honorary curators of the observa- tory, Robert R. and Francis -C. Mc- Math, and Henry S. Hulbert, of De- troit, are also planning to be pres- ent for the purpose of taking movie films of' the -phelnonena - of the (Continued on Page 6) 'Rare' Match Boxes Reward Local Man's 'Research' Efforts Running the gamut of places to eat, places to sleep, and things to sell from Maine to California is the match bo'x collection containing 665 "rare" specimens of which Mack Stribley, 628. W. Huron St., is the proud possessor. Located in Stribley's garage on' No. Ashley St., the collection covers the better part of a partition which Call 2-1214 For Scores The score of the Michigan- Northwestern basketball game will not be available until 10 o'clock tonight. Call 21214 af- ter that ,time. A special opera- tor will be on duty. REPLY FROM C LANCY Representative Claims in Letter That He Was Misquoted by Newspapers. Representative Robert H. Clancy, in letters to The Daily and Presi- dent Alexander G. Ruthven, yester- day denied having made the state- ments that drinking conditions at the University of Michigan were "horrible" and that athletes were drinking, "every one," as were credited to him by press dispatches 'in Detroit papers. Representative Clancy's letter in full-was as follows: "Enclosed please find copy of my telegram to a Detroit newspaper which was in reply to a telegram asking for further views from me on college drinking and particu- larly at the University of Michigan. "The request was made because I testified on January 12th before the Senate Manufactures Commit- tee and devoted several sentences to a comparison of the effect of prohibition and anti-prohibition upon college students in Canada and in the United States. "I also said that I had spent two weeks at Oxferd University, Eng- land, and found the students not demoralized by drinking beer, ale and other drinks which were easy of access there. "Referring to newspaper stories, I did not say that drinking condi- tions at the U. of M. were "hor- rible," and particularly was care- ful .not to say that "athletes are drinking, every one." "I have always been particularly anxious not to condemn a whole, class on the drinking problem or as practicing any vice or delinquency, as in every group there are some good and some bad. I have been so friendly to athletes all my life that it would be absurd for anybody to say that I specifically referred to them in a derogatory manner. Moreover, my experience has been that athletes are more abstemious than thet average student and that practically all of them areabstain- ers during training season. "The last thing in the world I want to be is a falsifier, as that is one of my chief complaints against professional drys, an when I make a mistake in a heated de- bate or in writing anything my rec- (Continued on Page 6) I separates a store room from the re- - mainder of the shop. . Flint Heiress Begins As far 'as the local field is con- cerned, Stribley says his collection Sentence For Murder is virtually complete and that any PLYMOUTH, Jan. 15.-(P)-Helen further efforts will be directed Morgan, Flint heiress, entered the chiefly along national and interna- Detroit House of Correction today tional lines. Already his collection claims an almost exhaustive "re- to begin a 20 to 25-year sentence search" into Mexico City match for murdering her sweatheart, Les- boxes with a collection of 23 repre- lie Casteel. Her mother, who ac- sentative specimens. companied her as far as the recep- Although the garage mechanic's tion room, said she would fight for research has extended over less a nehr trial. than two years he has obtained ,boxes from over half the states ex- tending from New .York to Cali- Economists Agree Upon fornia, from Canada to Florida, and utine Program; Sha O tiePorm h jrepresenting various extremes. Plam to Aid Business; rf man Member of Group Score of Legal Representatives Mentioned for Supreme Court Seat; Include Michener LAW E NFORCEMENT' 'Impartial' Attitude of Public Blamed by Former Marine for Ineffectiveness. (Special to The Daily) YPSILANTI, Mich., Jan. 15.- Public antagonism to "strong-arm" tactics was blamed for ineffective law enforcement by Gen. Smedley Butler in a talk tonight in Pease auditorium. Gen. Butler told 1,800 listeners that the methods employed by ma- rines in America's insular posses- sions would be frowned on were they adopted in the United States as a means of enforcing law and order. Commenting on his experi- ence in taking over law enforce- ment in Philadelphia a few years NEW YORK, Jan. 15.-(W)-A group of the leading economists of the United States, after two months of interchange of opinion, have agreed upon a program of econom- ic action which they believe should revivify business, restore values, in- crease employment and' strengthen banks. Warren M. Persons, prominent economist, in an exclusive inter- view with the Associated Press, to- day, said the. program has been in- dorsed by trade associations, con- gressmen, government economists, farm organizations and prominent individuals. Its success, he said, depended upon wide co-operation of important interests, particularly industrials and bankers, and that it seemed assured. Program Simple. Their program is relatively sim- ple, and, Dr. Persons explained, represents the least common de- nominator of effective platforms upon which agreement seemed pos-