ESTABUSHED 1 1890 Jr Ait 4ati MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS VOL. XLII. No. 142 SIX PAGES ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, APRIL 21, 1932 WEATHER: Cloudy, possibly rain. PRICE FIVE CENTS EXPERTS ENDORSE SURGICAL THERAPYI FOR TUBERCOUSIS Scientists Discuss C o 11a p s e Method of Treating Disease. TO MEET IN WASHINGTON Dr. Alexander Presents NewI Method of Handling Specific Cases. Curing pulmonary tuberculosis by; collapsing the patient's lung has' ben developed to a point where it is now estimated that more than ten per cent of the cases suffering from this form of the disease can safely be treated by surgical meth- ods, it was brought out at the con- Eight Injured in Fire vention of thoracic surgeons which closed here yesterday after a three- day session of papers and clinics.< Four of the more advanced meth- ods of collapse therapy occupied ' Associated Press Photo the greater part of the delegates' attention.Those methods are: re- One man was killed and eight moval of a nerve in the neck of the others injured at Omaha, Neb., patient which paralyzes the dia- when exploding grain dust and a phram and so collapses the lung; resulting fire wrecked a tower of removal of the ribs to allow the the Allied grain mills, which was lung to be collapsed; applying con- grinding wheat into feed and flour tinuous pressure on the lung by ar- for the Nebraska-South Dakota Vificial means; and the cutting of drought area. Loss was estimated certain muscles which control res- at $350,000. pirnation. f---fTl Tuberculosis Cuee Announced. meeting was the explanation of the A U 11 cure of a patient suffering from tuberculosis in both lungs. Dr. Duff Allen of St. Louis reported this T BE L S I1 case; %the repot was received with ,_ great enthusiasm by members of Right to Drive for Recreational the society who hailed it as the outstanding contribution of the Purpose Will Not Depend meeting. on Scholastic Rating. The presentation by Dr. John _ Alexnder, of the department of The privilege of driving a car surgery, of his newlobectomy, a unipe' method of removing a dis- during the 1932 Summer session for eased lobe of the lung developed by recreational purposes will not de- him at the University hospital, was pend on scholastic standing, it was also received by the meeting as a announced yesterday by Walter B. contribution of unusual significance. Rea, assistant to the dean of stu- Dr. Alexander's method includes dents. In other respects the regula- effecting a number of adhesions tion will be identical with that in within the thoracic cavity prior to effect last year, he said. the actual operation of removing Complete exemption from the rul- the diseased lobe. ing, and consequent freedom to Describe Rare Cancer Operation. drive without University supervi- Dr. Edward D. Churchill of Bos- sion, will be based on four consider- ton described in a paper his results ations, as outlined in the announce- in an attempt to remove a cancer ment for the Summer session. from the lung. The operation has Students exempt from the auto been tried relatively few times, it ban include those who in the aca- was learned. demic yea are engaged in profes- Dr. Frederick A. Coller, head of sional pursuits, as, for example, the department of surgery, and Dr. teachers, lawyers, physicians, den- Walter G. Maddox presented a tists, and nurses; those attending paper in which the problem of the the Public Health institutes; those loss of water from the patient's sys- who are 28 years of age or over; tom during an operation was con- and those who have a faculty rank- sidered. This discussion was pre- ing of teaching assistant or its pared with reference to surgery in equivalent. general as well as to the operations Special permission. and driving which involved the thoracic cavity. permits according to Rea, may be Dr. Alexander was assisted in his secured from the dean of students clinical demonstrations by Dr. Cam- by other students not exempt, for cron Haight, Dr. Duane Carr, and participation in outdoor sports such Dr. J. Dewey Bisgard. Dr. Paul S. as golf, tennis, and swimming. Barker, of the department of in- Others whose circumstances make ternal medicine. Dr. John Barn- it necessary for them to drive cars well also presented a paper. may receive permits also, Rea said. At the session held yesterday "Our jurisdiction," he said, "will morning, it was decided to hold the depend largely on the merits of next meeting of the society May 2 individual cases. It is very difficult and 3, 1933, in Washington, D. C. to make blanket regulations in matters of this sort; consequently Aeronautics Articles we interview all students who wish to apply for permits and make our to Appear in Technic decisions largely on the basis of the --impression of the student that we Featured in the April issue of the gain in this manner. Michigan Technic, which goes on "The dean wishes it to be par- sale next Monday, Tuesday and ticularly understood that students 'Wednesday, will be three articles who have been enrolled in the regu- on entirely different subjects em- lar session either here or at some bracing the fields of aeronautics, other school are not eligible for private property and a biography permits unless other considerations on Prof. Thomas M. Cooley. merit such action." "No Landing Fields" is the title of the aeronautics article written Youth Admits Taking by Richard Cogger a n d Robert Hayes, both junior engineering stu- Glider Society Car dents. Walter Sadler, assistant pro- fessor of civil engineering, is the An 18-year-old Jackson y o u t h auto author of "Law Governing Pri- who was arrested yesterday by of- vate Property." ficers in that city, admitted that he SUBPOENA BRHOKERS IN PROBE oFBEAR RAID1S ON MARKT Senate Banking Committee Sets Stage for Final Testimony in Investigation. TWENTY ARE SUMMONED House Body Goes Forward With Huge Omnibus Bill to Curb Government Costs. WASHINGTON, April 20.-(/P)-- The stage was set today for the denouement in the Senate banking committee's investigation of bear raiding on Wall Street with the su- den summoning under subpoena of a score of brokers. Without warning, agents of the committee moved on the New York financial district and ordered heads of some of the largest firms to tes- tify tomorrow on the administra- tion's charges that professional bears have destroyed stock prices for their own gain. While this scene provided the dramatic on capitol hill, the House ecenomy committee drove onward in an effort to complete by tomor- row night a huge omnibus bill to curtail sharply governmental out- lays. Plan to Save Millions. Provisions affecting World War veterans that had been estimated to save $28,000,000 were eliminated. Other of President Hoover's pro- posals to slash the cost of the vet- erans' administration $30,000,000 were approved. The group also agreed to vote finally tomorrow on whether the chief executive shall have authority to reorganize cer- tain governmental activities along lines devised upon by Congress. Veterans legislation also continu- ed to occupy the House ways and means committee, which is consid- ering proposals to expand the cur- rency and cash adjustment service certificates. As opponents pushed their testimony against the pay- ment, House leaders who have al- igned themselves with the oppo- sition were looking favorably to- ward a cut in loan charges to the veterans. This plan, which Rep. Patman (D., Tex.) said would be unaccept- able as a compromise, contemplates restoration in part if not in whole of the maturity values of the bonus certificates that have been whit- tled away by unpaid interest on loans. SOCIETY TO MEET DETROITDEBATERS Sigma Rho Tau Team to Opposc City College Orators Tonight at Union. Sigma Rho Tau, engineering for- ensic society, will engage the De- troit City College chapter of the same organization in a debate to- night at 7:45 in room 302 in the Union. The Michigan debaters will take the negative side of the ques- tion, Resolved: that the immediate completion of the St. Lawrence waterway project is feasible. City college will be represented by Harold Tapert, Norman B r o w n, Lewis Larimee, and Earl Baker, al- ternate. The local team will be composed of E. L. Fairchild, '32E, B. C. Coats, '32E, D. F. Bleil, '32E, and R. L. Gillilan, '34E.j Sigma Rho Tau will send a team to Detroit, Saturday, April 23, to meet their chapter at Detroit In- stitute of Technology. This debate, which will also concern the water- way question, will be held in the Y. M. C. A. auditori um. B. D. Schroeder, '33E, E. A. Kazmark, '33E, J. D. O'Brien, '34E, R. L. Price, I '33E, and R. G. Finch,. '34E, have been named to take the affirmative side for the Michigan chapter. Senior Canes Must Be Ordered by Saturday Orders for senior canes for all of the schools and colleges of the University must be placed by the end of the week, Jay Sikkenga, '32, chairman of canes for the literary school, stated yesterday. The canes may be ordered at the Wagner clothing store on State street. The cane chosen hv the literar Professor's Daughter and Freshman Elope Using the bride's father's carj to elope, Mary Louise Worey, '34 daughter of Professor and Mrs. John Worley, and James S. Sym- ons, Jr., '35, of Saginaw were married yesterday afternoon at Angola, Indiana. The bride's parents and Jean- ette Detwiler, a sorority sister of Mrs. Symons, received telegrams last night telling them of the wedding and stating that the couple would return some time next week. Professor Worley said that they would probably go to Chicago before returning to the school. According to Professor and Mrs. Worley, who had no knowledge of the couple's plans, they bor- rowed the Worley car shortly after 1 o'clock yesterday after- noon and left for Indiana. After the marriage ceremony they noti- fled their parents and friends and lft Angola. The news of the wedding came as a complete surprise to friends and relatives. The elopement brought the number of marriages announced by University students for the past week to three, the two other couples being Mr. and Mrs. James W. Bishop and Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Blair.' MIOTORCCLE CRAS INJURESTWO BoYs Local Youths Run Into Car; Abbot Boy Receives Broken Back. Floyd Abbott, son of Horatio J. Abbott of 2010 Devonshire Road, and Floyd Bressler, 20, of 324 S. Fourth Ave., were injured last night when the motorcycle on which they were riding collided with a car driven by Prof. Edwin C. Goddard, member of the law faculty of the University. Abbott, who was driving the mo- torcycle, Teceived a broken back and leg injuries; Bressler, sustain- ed minor injuries and cuts on the legs but received no broken bones. The accident occurred at the cor- ners of Forest and Hill Streets at about 7 o'clock in the evening. The Goddard sedan was tuning the corner to go north on Forest when the motorcycle, coming west on Hill Street, ran into the rearofsthe car. Both of the young men were im- mediately rushed to St. Joseph's I Mercy hospital, where Abbott was taken directly to an operating room.' Reports issued late last night stat- ed that Bressler's injuries were not of a serious nature and that Abbott would probably recover. Group Tries to Make Examinations Easier A cribbing service for Michi- gan undergraduates may be in- auigurated on the campus in the near future. The Princeton Alumni Weekly yesterday said that an organiza- tion had been formed which would "raise college cribbing to the position of a major indus- try," according to the Associated Press, by supplying undergrad- uates with a four-year set of essays for $100 cash. A representative of the com- pany has visited the Princeton campus as well as Yale and Harvard in an effort to obtain testimonials for the service.E These will be used to drum up business in mid-western univer- sities. RICHEST FOLK BAC IN NEGRO PLA Y A definite movement toward the folk drama is evidenced in the play writing of today in the opinion of Prof. Kenneth T. Rowe, of the Eng- lish department who commented yesterday on the three negro plays written by Miss Doris Price, Grad., which will be given tomorrow night in the laboratory theatre. Profes- sor Rowe stated that these plays were drawn from perhaps the rich- est folk background in the country, the lives of the negroes in the south. Such plays as "Porgy," ''Green Grow the Lilacs," and "Green Pas- tures" illustrate this tendency in the current drama, he brought out. UP NOTEON STAN Crowd Cheers as Confident3al Note' Is Destroyed by Witness. ATTACK IS DE CRIBED States That She Had Undergone Mental Examination Last Summer. HONOLULU, April 20.-(T)-In the white heat of anger, Mrs., Thalia Massie destroyed on the witness stand today a paper hand- ed her by Pros-cutor John C. Kelley which allegedly contained evidence 4 1 Jack Rosevear TO FEATUR E DAN'CEI that she once had said there was' a rift between her and her hus- band, Lieut. Thomas H. Massie. The outburst came after Mrs. Gridiron Dance Artist Massie had told, between showers Specialty Numbers by Gorrell's RINISTATES HIM Action Announced as Attorney Threatens $100,000 Suit. HAWKESABROAD Former Editor Refuses to Comment; Friends Deny Agreement, NEW YORK, April 20.-/P2)- Reed Harris, expelled editor of the Columbia University student daily, was reinstated to his classes today, and then immediately re- signed. The action was announced by Associate Dean Nicholas Mc- Knight and followed a statement by Harris' attorney, Rayrmond L. Wise, that he was ready to serve papers in a $100,000 breach of contract suit against the univer- sity. The youthful editor, who wrote caustic criticisms of intercollegi- ate football and charged the uni- versity dining hall was run for personal profit, was expelled April 1. Protesting students later de- clared a strike, stayed #away from classes for a day and congregated in mass meetings on the library steps, where eggs and fists vied with oratory of opposing factions. Hawkes in Europe. Dean Herbert E. Hawkes, who ex- pelled Harris, now is in Europe. The McKnight statement said: "University authorities fully sus- tained Dean Hawkes in his action" and declared the Harris case "did not come within the principles of free speech and freedom of the press." The statement said Harris had voluntarily submitted to D e a n h Hawkes a satisfactory apology for his letter of April 6, replying to the dean's demand for explanation of the dining hall charges. of tears, of the criminal attack upon her, in which Joseph Kaha-1 hawai, lynching victim, allegedly had participated. Mrs. Massie had been called as the final defense witness in behalf of Massie and three others accused of the killing. Tears Up Paper. The prosecutor asked her if she always had been kind and consid- erate, to which she replied yes. He then asked if she had taken the psychopathic examination at the University of Hawaii last summer, and again she replied affirmatively. Then Kelley handed her the paper. "Is that your writing?" he asked. She gazed at it for a moment and then with eyes blazing said, "This is a confidential paper be- tween me and a physician. Where did you get it?" "I am asking, not answering the questions," Kelley said. Mrs. Massie tore the paper to pieces. "I refuse to answer," she said. The destruction of the paper was followed by the applause of spec- tators. In a voice shaking with anger, Judge Davis lectured the audience for demonstrating when Mrs. Mas- sie was testifying. Then he ad- iourned court until tomorrow morn- Pianist Are Planned for Grid Party. Jack Rosevear, prominent dance pianist and specialty players, will feature the music of Ray Gorrell's orchestra, of Detroit, which will play for the Gridiron dance Friday night, it was learned yesterday. The Gorrell band, which is under contract with Sigma Delta Chi, professional journalistic fraternity which is sponsoring the dance, to play from 9:30 until 2:00 o'clock, is reputed to be among the best or- ganizations of its type in the Mid- dle West. Members of the ticket committee for the dance were elated last night over the rapidity with which tickets for the affair have been sold. In spite of the fact that the sale was restricted to an invitation list of campus leaders until the ma- jority of those on the list had re- sponded, it was said yesterday that the only tickets still remaining for sale were a few which members of the committee had not yet checked in to George A. Stauter, chairman of the committee. Preparations to decorate the edi- torial rooms of the new Publica- tions building, where the dance is to be held, were going forward yes- terday under the direction of Ken- a a , 3 t r t ing. neth Yourd, '33, chairman of the .rris eclinedto comment,bt decorations committee. Yourd de- his friends said he had apologized clared that the motif for the party only for the "tone" of his letter. Intramural Baseball will center about huge caricatures They said that the resignation was Begun by Fraternities of past holders of the Oil Can, not by agreement with University which is awarded by Sigma Delta authorities, put that the editor has Several close battles featured the Chi annually to a faculty member, said repeatedly since his expulsion opening of the Intramural softball together with the title "Loquacious he would resign if reinstated. leagues yesterday. Delta Phi de- Lubricator." feated Alpha Kappa Lambda, 7-6, Carl S. Forsythe, '32, president of in the hardest fought game on the the fraternity, said last night that j afternoon's program. Another close he has every reason to believe the U IM 'W L contest was between Chi Psi and | dance will be a success. "We have Sigma Alpha Mu, which the former sold tickets only to student leaders won 8-6. on the campus and personal friends Lambda Chi Alpha turned in the of Sigma Delta Chi members, and most decisive triumph, taking the are assured of having an exclusive, measure of Phi Mu Delta, 29-6. intimate party." To Review Medical Progress Complete results follow: of Past Fifty Years Delta Phi 7, Alpha Kappa Lamb- 1 1at Celebration. da6 T Phi Kappa Sigma 16, Psi U 15 ' Thepast fifty years in the pr- Delta Tau Delta 18, ATO 5 ;T'cps of medical science will be Sigma Chi 25, Phi Kappa Tau 12 I completely reviewed at the fiftieth DKE 13, Theta Delta Chi 8 INOUmp I IUUIII nniversary celebration of Nu Sig- Chi Psi 8, Sigma Alpha Mu 6 1nvrayclbaino uSg Pi Lambda Phi 19, Chi Phi 11 Delta Sigma Pi 6, Delta U 4 Present Californa E x e c u t i v c will commence today and continue remdKpa7,et g- sF thl eforia e cWutiefor the rest of the week here,. Em- Phi Lambda Kappa 17, Delta Sig- Is Fourth Before Whom inent physicians including Dr. Wil- SigmaNu 9, Pi Kappa Alpha Case Has Been Tried. iam Mayo of Rochester, Minn., Dr. S Ph NuChi , PiGappa DAlha 52_C C. Bafour also of Rochester, Phi Chi 5, Phi Gamma Delta 2 SAN FRANCISCO, Cal., April 20. lbean Joseph L. Miller of Rush mod- Phi Sigma Kappa 9, Beta Theta -(/P)-Within San Quentin sea- cal college in Chicago, and Dr. L. Tau Delta Phi 22, Theta Xi 7 splashed walls near here, Toni . Barker of Johns Hopkins will be Phi Kappa Psi 9, Theta Chi 6 Mooney today went about his daily Ipresent to take part in the speeches Alpha Sigma Phi 15, Kappa Delta chores outwardly unconcerned that and clinics which will attract not Rho 1 a decision will be announced to- only Nu Sigma Nu members but Mu' morrow on his 15-year fight for other doctors as well from many Delta 6. freedom and exoneration. parts of the country. D Mooney was convicted in 1917 for The most outsanding event of to- the bombing of the 1916 San Fran- day's program will be a public lec- KGROUND SHOWN I cisco Preparedness parade. The toure at 8 o'clock in the Mendelssohn , conviction brought pleas from men { heatre. "Fifty Year' Progress in S, PROF. ROWE SA YS I of prominence t h r o u g h o u t the internal Medicine" will be the sub- world for his release. ;ect of the address which will be as those written by Yeats, Synge, Gov. James Ralph, jr., will answer delivered by Dr. Barker. This meet- and O'Casey would have been what Mooney's appeal for a full and un- ing will also be addressed by Presi- they are had they been written by conditional pardon sometime after (tent Alexander G. Ruthven who Englishmen. noon tomorrow. will extend the official welcome or In discussing the actual plays of To reach his decision the present the University. Dr. Fredrick G. Miss Price, Professctr Rowe says, 'chief executive of California, the ' Novy, chairman of the executivQ "'The Bright Medallion' is a rather fourth before whom the historic committee of the medical school, long one act play, with complicated case has been fought, appointed a will preside. structure afid twenty four charac- body of advisors who have deliber- At 2 o'clock today clinics will be ters. One of its attractions is the ated on the case for three months. given at the hospital by Dr. M. A. sense of richness and variety which Blankenhorn, professor of clinical is conveys." One of the purposes Dean Bates Speak medicine at western reserve uni- of the author in writing the dra- versity and Dr. D. C. Balfour of ma was to bring out as many char- in All-Campus Forum thn Mayo clinic. acteristics of the negro race as was _ _At a 6 o'clock dinner a number possible within the limits which Dean Henry M. Bates of the Law of well known medical men will be the one act form imposed, Profes- school will discuss "Liberalizing In- ai hand, it is expected. Dr. W. A. sor Rowe explained. I fluences of the Supreme Court," at Evans, editor of the healt# column With regard to the staging of the 14:15 todahv in Natura1 rnene auri- of the Chicno nail Trihiivip ,mri Three Crash Victims Are Recovering Here Three of the four University stu- dents injured when au automobile in which they were returning after Spring vacation was wrecked near South Bend, Ind., were recovering last night. John W. Bouret, Grad., who sus- tained back injuries, was resting better last night, according to doc- University Glider society, as well as breaking into and robbing the Ma- sonic Temple and Elks' home here the night of April 14. Jackson officers, in their com- munication to Chief Thomas M. O'Brien, said that the youth, whose name was not disclosed, had stolen a car in Jackson. INTERFRATERNITY GROUP ASKS FOR NEW TRYOUTS