AL., 2r=t]C Ib I MEMBER ASSOCIATED) PREPS .......... . . ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 1932 WEATHER: Fair today. PRICE FIVE - .. This mass meeting on the steps of the Columbia university library was called to urge a student strike in protest against expulsion of Reed Harris, editor of the Spectator, student publication. Reed was ousted by school authorities because he failed to prove to their satisfaction the truth of gditorial statements attacking athletics, food at the University dining halls, and other school activities. STATE EDUCATRS, TO HOD MEETING HEREAPRIL283 Michigan Schoolmasters' Clubl Planning 67th Annual Convention. DISCUSSIONS ARRANGED hirty Conferences in All Fields of Instruction to Be 1 Carried on. Plans for the sixty 6eventh an- nual meeting of the Michiganl Schoolmasters' club, to be held here7 April 281, 29, and 30, have been com- pleted, according to officers of the organization. Informality of discussion will be stressed, with the conference func- tioning to the fullest possible ex- tent as a forum, when the session, whiich for the first time i recent :year s is to be continued util Sat utrday morning, eonvenes. T ht e Schoolmasters' cub is the o1ldet organization of its type in the country. According to officers of the or- ganization, 30 conferences of edu- cators in every field of instruction will be under way during the con- ven tion., Reduce Formal Papers. An attempt is to be made, it was said, to reduce to considerable -ex- tent the amount of time to be given over to the reading of formal pa- pers, while sessions will be given over to discussion of current school trends and problems, in conformity with the keynote around which the meeting is to center, "An Appraisal of Current Opinion of Our Second- ary Schools and Higher Institu- tions." More than 100 teachers, however, will read papers and re- ports. Parents, Teachers to Attend. Members of the Parent-Teacher association will attend, as last year, the second annual Parent Educa- tion institute, which is to meet on April 2ion to speakers on this program will in- clude D. W.Stewart, pr sldent of the Michi#ga Cogress of' Parents and Teachers, Mrs. Hugh Bradford, president of the National Congress of Parents and Teachers, and Miss Florence Hale, president of the Na- tional Education association. Ruthven to Talk. Among other events pn the pro- gram for.the convention will be an address by Pres. Alexander G.Ruth- ven and the annual University Honors convocation. Finals in the Michigan High School Debating league will also take place during the meeting, as will a teacher- training conference to be sponsor-1 ed by the School of Education- Concurrent with the Schoolmas- ters' convention will be the annual meeting of the Michigan Associa- tion of College Registrars, which will convene April 30, while a col- lection of high school text books will be on exhibition in the Univer- sity High school library during the convention. ENGINEERS DEFEAT Sigma Rho Tau Gains Audience Decision Over Detroit City College. Sigma Rho Tau, engineering de- bating society, defeated the Detroit City college in their debate last night at the Union. The teams de- bated on the question, "Resolved: That the Immediate Coippletion of the St. Lawrence Waterway Is Feas- ible." The Michigan team was compos- ed of Edward L. Fairchild, '32E;. Byron C. Coats, '32E; and David F. Bleil, '32E. City college was repre- sented by Carl Turnquist, Donald Davis, and Edwin Barrows. Michigan took the negative side and successfully sustained its op- position to the project, although the decision was gained by only a narrow margin. Prof. Rufus to Attend Rittenhouse Ceremony Prof. W. Carl Rufus, of the astro- nomy department, left for Phila- delphia yesterday to attend the bi- ceutenary celebration in honor of Lindbergh Agents A wait Kidnappers' Message; Expect Mysterious Trips HOPEWELL, N.J., April 7.--(A)- A call which might send one or more of them on a trip to a destin- ation known only to themselves was awaited tonight by three Norfolk men seeking to bring about the re- turn of Charles Augustus Lind- bergh, Jr. John Hughes Curtis, one of the trio, returned yesterday after a four-day absence and reported he had made a contact and received assurance that the kidnapped baby was well. He also said he had seen Col. Lindbergh somewhere on his trip. Today Rear Admiral Guy H. Bur- rage, making the only additional statement for Mr. Curtis, the Very Rev. Dean H. Dobson-Peacockrand himself, added that Col. Lindbergh CA9PTI HAWS UR IN PLANEI RCU Flier Lifted Unconscious From Wrecked Plane; Injuries Not Serious. WORCESTER, Mass., April 7. - (IP)--Capt. Frank M. Hawks, noted speed flier, was injured today in .n attempted take-off from the Wor- cester Airport. A soft field prevent- ed Hawks' plane from picking up enough speed to take to the air, and it crashed through under- growth, .over rocks and into a stone wall. Hawks was unconscious when lifted from his wrecked plane and it was first believed he had been critically hurt. His face was badly cut and bruised and X-ray pictures disclosed nose and jaw fractures which doctors said might result in facial paralysis. Hawks, who set a number of American speed records within the last few years and who also went to Europe to establish numerous records, was taking off for New York after a lecture here last night. His arrival yesterday was marked by a mishap when an escort plane piloted by John Whitin LaSelle, of Whitinsville, nosed over to one side of the central runway while leaving a clear field for Hawks. Lectures to Scouts. Flying here from St. Louis, Hawks lectured last night under the auspices of the Worcester Council, Boy Scouts of America. After breakfast this morning he went to the airport, planning to go to New York to complete plans for a flight to Porto Rico next week. Finding the field soft, he decided on a take-off from a dirt road cut- ting across the airfield. This proved unsatisfactory, so he took off across 1 the field. It was necessary for his plane to gain a speed of 70 miles rf hour in order to take off. The soft dirt held down the speed and the plane failed to rise while going 50 miles an hour. Hawks' wife was at Fort Worth, 'ex., when she received news of the accident, and she immediately communicated with Worcester by telephone and made plans to fly here if her husband was critically hurt. Wife Leaves by Train, She was assured the flier's condi- tion was not alarming, so she left by train. The quick hop of Col. Charles A. Lindbergh from New York to Paris prevented Hawks from realizing his ambition to be the first man to make this flight. He began his flying career as an impostor. He posed as a newspaper reporter to get passage with a barnstorming aviator and after he had confessed his role he was made ground assistant. During 1929, he began his assault on records in the United States and then went to Europe and Canada to set many informal records for flights between cities. Salaries for Hoover, Curtis Are Approved WASHINGTON, April 7. - (IP) - The $75,000 salary for President Hoover and the $15,000 salary for Vice-President Curtis in the next fiscal year was approved today by the House in the Independent offices supply bill. Including the salaries, a total of $429,380 was allowed the executive department for 1933. This is $113,000 less than the amount allowed for this year, as recommended by the budget. A*Iln n Af )s A .. had requested the negotiators here to continue their efforts. Admiral Burrage said they were holding themselves in readiness to leave at any time on another such mission as that undertaken by Mr. Curtis over last week-end. Col. H. Norman Schwarzkopf, the state police head, disclosed the nation-wide hunt for Harry Flei- scher, a known kidnapper, had been identified by reports he had been seen several times under suspicious circumstances since the Lindbergh baby was stolen from his crib. Sol. Schwarzkopf eliminated spec- ulation about an automobile seen in Featherbed Lane, near the Lind- bergh estate, last night, by saying "its operations had nothing to do with this case." CUT IN MILL TAX SLATED To PASS Bill to Reduce University Funds. Reported Out Favorably. LANSING, Mich., April 7.- (/) -Bills proposing reduction in the mill tax appropriation' for the University of Michigan and Michigan State college were reported favorably by the Senate finance and appropria- tions committee today. They have passed the house. The measure would cut the Univer- sity appropriation from $4,928,- 852 to $4,182,724, and that for Michigan State from $1, 640, 284 to $1,394,241. Senior Invitation Sale to Begin After Recess Invitations for commencement exercises will go on sale April 18, with the resumption of classes, and will continue throughout the week until April 22, according to Walter B. Rea, assistant to the dean of stu- dents. Rea said yesterday that informa- tion regarding orders for the invi- tations will be available in various schools and colleges, and that the senior class dues must be paid be- fore the invitations may be ordered. The invitations, which are pub-. ished by the various individual senior classes, are leather-covered books. Each will contain new pic- tares of prominent campus build- ings, including Angell hall, the Lib- rary, the Hospital, Legal Research library, and the Clements library. Auto Ban to Be Lifted at Noon for Vacation The automobile regulation will be lifted at noon today to permit stu- dents to drive home for the Sprng vacation, Walter B. Rea, assistant to the dean of students, said yester- day. The ban will be in force again at 8 o'clock Monday morning, April 18, when classes are resumed, he .said. PARISWILLJOIN, TO PASSTAX11BILL Senate Leaders Agree to Push Billion-Dollar Measure Through at Once. To Circulate Petitions Seekin New Trial for Expelled Columbia Student. REQUEST INVESTIGATIOI Brumm Deprecates Columbia Action in Firing Harris Without Fair Trial.' Following a speech in which Pro John L. Brumm, of the journalls department, deprecated the actic of the administration of Columb university in expelling Reed Harri editor of the Columbia Spectato the Micligan Socialist club Ia night determined to circulate f< signatures a petition requesting a immediate investigation into tU facts of the case, and a fair tri 'or Harris. "Every right thinking person declared Professor Bruimm, "w: condemn the way in which ti expulsior was made, and I thi the students of Columbia universi' are right in the action they a; taking to secure a fair hearing fe this case." Copies of the petition, to whk members of the Socialist club w attempt to obtain as many signi tures as possible, will be submitt to students today at various spo on the campus. Its text follows: Pres. Nicholas Murray Butler and Administration, Columbia university: ' "We, the undersigned stu- dents and faculty members of the University of Michigan, un- ferstanding from press, reports that Reed Harris, acredted editor of the Columbia Specta- tor, has been expelled from Columbia University without a fair and proper hearing, do protest such action and re- spectfully request that ough investigaton wit to his re-instatement be '. ducted immediately. Although Professor Brumm ai members of the Socialist club we virtually unanimous in decryi the seemingly unfair manner which Harris was expelled, coni1 crable conservatism was evined discussing the justice that lay of the action, especially whe became apparent that no one pr sent possessed more than sup cial knowledge of the facts ud lying the case. "A college newspaper," said fessor Brumm, "is by its very ture differet from a pro publication, nd should b . by principles conducive toth oral welfare of the studentbd represents. Editors Not Conser vt., "Too often," Professor tr pointed out, "the college editor to realize this. Sometimes, y ing to an inordinate desire to up a rumpus,' and bring hisl to the general view of the p he will run far astray f th sponsibilities that h i ~ po should hold for him," Professor Brumm seemed t the opinion that although the derlying facts in thb,case were yet at the disposal of those pre'e at the meeting, still one woul b far wrong in assuming, tha least a part of the activity le to the recent expulsion had b ;rue to such a desire for pubi Riots Are Over, Btt Protets Pour Into Spectator NEW YORK, April 7.-1P)--a ceased on the Columbia campu day, egg-stains were cleane off A. lilt statue of "Alma Mat 7' tudents went back to ls., tests continued against, the e sion of Reed Harris, ditor co lege daily, the Spectator. Harris remained expelled, follo lng his editorial charges that t dining hall was run for person profit, but the Spectator editorial claimed victory. "Further rioti on the campus," it stated, "can best be only anticlimactical whether or not the battle will carried on in the courts is anothi matter." A stream of protests began pour in from other college edito but a counter-movement gain momentum with the statement W. N. K. Gray, a junior stude: that "five members of the facu (Continued on Pae 2) STUDENTS HERE A1 TRIAL FOR HARRI SPECTTOREI on May 3, according to Charles N. TradeUnion c s atMo Staubach, of the Spanish depart- in 1921. ment, who, with Gordon Farrell, of He has been editor of the Detroit the same department, will be in Labor News, the Industrial News of charge of the production. Lansing, and the Saginaw Valley The plays will be "Sin Palabras" Journal. He was a member of the by the Quintero brothers, and "Ro- executive committee of the Michi- sina es Fragil," by G. Martinez I gan Safety congress and was ap- Sierra. Tentative casts have already pointed by Governor Green as a been selected and rehearsals are member of the commission on Ol under way. 'Age Pensions. WASHINGTON, April 7.- (/P) - Enactment of the billion-dollar tax bill with a minimum of delay toddy was declarecI the common objective of both Republican and Democratic Senate leaders. The Democrats held a party con- ference and decided to support the measure. Soon afterward, Chair- man Smoot of the Finance Com- mittee, speaking for the Repub- licans, joined in the determination for prompt action. The Democrats reached no agree- ment on the controversy over in- _lusion of new tariff duties in the Lax bill, but one obstacle was re- moved when the sales levy, rejected ily the House, was ignored. Senator Robinson, of Arkansas, the party leader, said: "No proposal was made in the conference to revive the sales tax. Apparently the action of the House on the subject is regarded as con- clusive." Senator Harrison, ranking Demo- crat on the Finance Committee, i sued a formal statement. Senator Harrison said: "There will be no unnecessary delay in the consideration of the tax bill. The Finance Committee has set the time to hear witnesses on each of the