T.AS3LIsH 1890 t tit i r L. XLIL No. 90 SIX PAGES ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 27, 1932 PRICE FIVE CE] t NAL ACADEMlY IIENCES PLANS ONVENE HERE To 'Spur' or Not Is Gargoyle's to Query Meet in Fall of This Year; 'ree on Local Faculty Are Members. PRISES FAMED MEN s Will Be Presented Over Three-Day Duration' of Convention, "If you are riding ALONE on a narrow bridle-path and a tramp suddenly jumps out from the side of the road ... and you suddenly find that you are sitting on the neck of OUR tramp. . .Would you use youiP SPURS on him?" This all-important question is one of 'many similar intellectual queries included in one of the act- ual 1U n i y e r s i t y questionnaires, which is printed in the February number of the Gargoyle, on sale to- morrow. The questionnaire mentioned is one circulated by the Office of Edu- cational Investigation, and is quite authentic. It provides the foundan- SENATE WILL PASS u u~ U&, L s.'Jt.uL l u The National Academy of Scien- tion for ,one of the leading features s, the membership roll of which in this iLsue of the campus month- dludes the leaders in every sci- ly humorous magazine. IyCampus politicians provide the .tific field in the United States, "Hmph of the month" and the fac- s selected Ann Arbor for its 1932, ulty is practically ignored, for a nual fall meeting, it was reveal-, change, in the new issue.s in a letter received yesterday' The cover, it is explained, depicts' President Ruthven from Dr. W. two young men who attended the Campbell, '86, president this J-Hop--"After the ball is over." gar of the academy. An offer to Freshmen who wish Although no definite date for the na"ti ae, suggesting thaty eeting has been set, it is custom- first-year men will be welcomed as y for the organization, of which try-,outs on the Gargoyle. Another of. Moses Gomberg, of the chem- sketch by Powers appears in the xy department, Prof. Frederick February issue,athis time of one ivy, of the medical school, Prof. sTe "Encmia" for the month alter' B. Pillsbury, of the psychol- concerns Prof. William H. Hobbs, y department, and Prof. Heber D. and articles are included in the is- y depart- .eet either n Novem- York. sue concerning deferred rushing, the Michiganensian, and bluebooks. "Campus Talk" is more lengthy than usual and includes varied topics of general interest to cam- pus readers, according to the edi- Dawes, Jones, Couch Probable Directors of Reconstruction Industrial Loan Unit. HOOVER SENDS MESSAGE Chief Executive Asks Preference for American Materials "in Federal Use. WASHINGTON, Jan. 26.-(A3)- The reconstruction finance corpor- ation 'tonight had the.thing most necessary for its existence-money -and expected to have the men who will lend the funds to business in a day or two. The Senate is expected to supply that lack, just as today it receded from a minor amendment to give the corporation its initial working capital of $500,000,000. Quick Confirmation Expected. The names of Charles Gates Dawes, corporation president, and Jesse H. Jones, of Texas,, and Har- vey C. Couch, of Arkansas, direc- tors, are before it and quick con- firmation is expected. Meanwhile, the President s e n t another recommendation' for legis- lation for business aid to Congress by proposing that government de- partments be authorized to give preference to American materials, even though foreign firms submit lower bids. Reconstruction h a s dominated Congress all session, and with bills to aid depositors and creditors of insolvent banks shaping. themselves before Senate banking sub-commit- tees, the sway may continue. A Senate committee is also cosid- ering President Hoover's proposal for a system of banks to lend money to home owners and builders but it may find a good many obstacles ahead of it. Discuss Agricultural Bill. The HIouse today discussed the agricultural supply bill. -It was amended to prohibit federal road aid to states where convicts are employed on the highways. The House naval committee had disposed, of the $616,250,000 con- struction bill but it turned to an investigation of the giant airship, Akron, with Rear Admiral William A. Moffett, chief of the naval bur- eau of aeronautics, describing it as the best airship ever built. Busy framing a tax program, the House ways and means committee decided to begin next Tuesday on proposals to levy on oil. imports, electrical power and all natural and manufactured gas. SPEECH SOCIETIES CHOOSEOFFICERS Glavin, Thomas Named Head of Adeiphi, Alpha Nu. yhe aj New 1at temy nasI west, the invaria- city. Lo- I N 0 conven-- cal mem- lition to r. Frank 'rom the C e United Noted Journalist and Lecturer in 1929. , to Give Fourth Talk turer on versity. of Series. academy. on to the John B. Kennedy, associate editor >rganiza- of Collier's and famous journalist, the invi- will give the fourth lecture of the its mem- Oratorical Association series at 8 nlbershi o'clock tonight in Hill Auditorium. nsidere dHe will speak on "What Makes Per- ionors in the ence, since it se who have ves in scien- Letter. esident Ruth- id: you that the of presiding ng of the Na- ciences to be sonality ?" A journalist of wide experience, Mr. Kennedy will relate tonight what he began telling the public )1. He of the te Wir, lashesl BAY CITY, Jan. 26.-(A)-Taking Df testimony was believed conclud- d today in the investigation by the federal grand jury of law enforce- nent conditions in Flint. Twenty- our witnesses had been heard when the jury recessed for the day. SAUL T STE. MARIE, Jan. 26.-(P) -Mrs. Mary A. Ripley, Michigan president of the American Legion auxiliary, announced today that executives would hold their mid- yinter board meeting in Grand Rapids, Feb. 19 and 20. SHANGHAI, Jan. 26.-(AP)-Night :lubs and hotels in Shanghai were ;hronged tonight as 13 more ships >f war bore down on the city from Japan prepared to enforce Tokyo's demand that anti-Japanese activi- ies must cease or armed action will follow. NEW YORK, Jan. 26.-(A')-Op- position to a .League of Nations plank in the 1932 Democratic plat- 'orm came unexpectedly from New- ;on D. Baker today in a statement which also voiced his belief in the ventual participation in the Lea- ;ue by the United States. He denied he was a candidate for the Presi- aential nomination. &'j Election of officers for the see- in Carnegif ond semester was held by two for- the well-kr ensic organizations yesterday, Al- was secure pha Nu and Adelphi. and since John E Glavin, '32, wad elected leading ma speaker of Adelphi; Robert H. How- pany. ard, '34, clerk; Melvin G. Levy, '34, Light o treasurer, and David L. Gallup, '33, stepping sergeant-at-arms. Following a cus- tom of many years, the new officers Thomas as entertained members of the society time and in the tap room of the Union 'fol- immediatel lowing the elections., t ic critics. B Alpha Nu elections resulted in the in Europe a selection of D. R. Thomas, '32, as his first ap president; James Henley, '32, vice- cago Civic { president; Ford W. Spikerman, '32, reengaged 1 S e c r e t a r y, Hubert Horne, '32, Baromeo, treasurer, and Joseph C. Callahan, several of Grad.,, senior critic. (Coni of things he has seen and heard in print and speech. His work has car- ried him to all parts-of the United States, Canada, Great Britain, and the Continent. Besides being a journalist and editor, Mr. Kennedy is also a radio announcer, conducting each week five-minute radio talks, a feature termed by one of the large metro- politan newspapers as the "biggest little feature on the air." Mr. Kennedy's specialty, however, is in the subject of personalities. He holds what is believed to be a re- cord for "interviews," with all types of people. It is of the qualities mak- ing up the term "personality" that Mr. Kennedy will discuss tonight. Council Begins Issuing J-Hop Party Permits The InterfraterAity Council, in cooperation with the 1933 J-Hop committee, will issue permits for house parties held the week-end of the J-Hop, under the printed rules of the committee, it was said yes- terday. These permits must be secured by the houses concerned from the Michigan Daily Not Official Organ of University, Says Angell in Talk The Michigan Daily is a student newspaper, not an official organ of the University of Michigan, and its policy in no manner reflects the attitude of the administration, Prof. Robert C. Angell, of the So- ciology department, and chairman of the Board in Control of Student Publicaions, said yeserday. Speaking over WJR in a Univer- sity-of-the-air broadcast, Professor Angell declared that undue criti- cism had been directed in the past at the University because the pub- lic assumed that the policies of The Daily were those of the University. These policies, he continued, are