ESTABLISHED 1890 p it 4 m4ll IMEMBER ASSOCIATED' PRESS VOL. XLIL No. 155. SIX PAGES ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, MAY 6, 1932 WEATHER: Rain, Thundershowers PRICE FIVE CENTS . .... ....... . fR E ITIES rp RO RUSHI G PL 1 * * * * * * * Alumni Will Arrive Today For Annual Spring Homecoming MANY SPECIAL ENTERTAINMENTS TO FEATURE THREE DAY PROGAM Visitors Will Attend Traditional Class Events; New Press Building Open for Inspection; Free Show to Follow Cap Night. Michigan's second annual Spring H omecornin, inaugurated last year to include events which had formerly been conducted separately during the second and third weeks of May, will start today when returning alumni arrive for the three-day program of traditional ceremonies, exhibitions, banquets, and speeches which have been arranged by the University and the people of Ann Arbor. Special exhibits in the University museum, considered one of the finest institutions of its type in the world, architectural showings, Engineering Open House, displays by the physics department, art exhibits, and inspection of the new Legal Research library will open today's program and continue on Ithr ough Sturdlay. BU TTSTO g dhe new University Student 'ub- 1} t oi bui ildifg, costing $175,000 which will house all student publi- ations, will be open for inspection IN during .the first, two days of the p1ogram. "M" Blankets to be Given. Freshmen Will Begin Ceremony Annual Cap Night ceremonies will at 8 o'Clock; Huge Crowd be held at 8 o'clock tonight in expected to Attend. Sleepy Hollow, at which time first year men will throw their "pots" into the blazing fire and "M" men Cap Night, the traditional event will be awarded blankets. A free which marks the graduation of the show for all students at both the freshman class into the ranks of Michigan and Majestic theatres sophomores, will be'held at 8 o'clock will follow the addresses of athletic 'night in sleepy~Holldw"when the coaches at the traditional field. The first year men, 800 strong, snak- Varsity band, as in past years, will dance about a huge bonfire and be present at the ceremonies. throw their "pots" into the blaze. Angell hall observatory will be Special arrangements have been open during the evening, where made to take care of the unusually visitors may view the astronomical large crowd of students, townspeo- equipment under the direction of ple, and returning alumni which members of the department. Special is expected to attend the ceremon- dances at the League and Union ies and amplifiers will be installed 'will be featured both nights with so that all may hear the speeches. the Union presenting its May Frolic Edward Kuhn, '32, recording seC- balloon dance from 9 to 1 tonight. retary of the Union will act as mas- Reeves Will Lecture. ter of ceremonies at the affair.,o Talks will be given by Edward J. Other events on the opening day's McCormick, '32, president of the prbfam include the Henry Russel 'Student Council, Kenneth M. Stev- *4:ur by Prof. Jesse S. Reeves at 'Stden pro uci KennDet h M.t ey-4:15 o'clock this afternoon in the ens, prominent Detroit attorneyNtrlSineadoiu ad and Fielding H. Yost, director of Natural Science auditorium and andldingCcH.Yost, dwill also various exhibits in William Clem- athletics. CoachkYostwmllwlo ents library which will be o'pen to award "M" blankets to men who visitors from 2 to 5 o'clock. have won at least two varsity let- Saturday's plans include, in addi- treshen will senble at 7:3 lion to a continuation of the vari- o'clock in front of the Union and ous exhibits by the several depart- -'inments, a Homecoming luncheon for Mother's at 1 o'clock at the League, Members of the freshman and a bridge tea at 2 o'clock, and the sophomore classes of all schools dual track meet with the Univer- and colleges of the University will sity of Illinois, when the Michigan gather this afternoon at the Huron team will defend its outdoor cham- river for the first day's activities pionship track title. The Union's of the annual spring games in a Father and Son banquet will be renewal of the battle for underclass held at 6:15 tomorrow night. supremacy. Worley to Speak. Led by their respective bands, the An address by Professor John S. two classes will parade to the scene Worley of the transportation en- of battle. Freshmen under their co- gineering department, a swimming captains Charles Shelly and George carnival, and a concert by the Duffy will asemble promptly at 3 Varsity band and the Men's and o'clock on the steps of the Union, Women's Glee Clubs will complete while their rivals under the leader- Saturday's program. ship of William McRoy will meet Appropriate Mother's Day serm- at Waterman gymnasium. Univer- ons at Ann Arbor churches will sity classes will be dismissed at that provide the center for Sunday's time for all of the students par~ activities, at which time the seniors ticipating in the traditional under- of the University will begin their class struggle. spring activties with Cane Day. Three tugs of war are scheduled President and Mrs. Alexander G. for this afternoon, the first two of Ruthven will be at home to visitors which will be between selected 50-during the afternoon. man teams from each class.d The games will be resumed to- morrow morning at south Ferry NOTICE field with the holding of the cane sprees, the obstacle race, the pillow The Board in Control of Stu- fights, and the hog-tieing contests. (ident Publications will hold its APOLOGIES! Tokio Ball Player Offers Bat to Player He Injured. That Japanese courtesy and ori- 1ental ceremony do not cease to be respected when the Rikkio univer- sity baseball team takes the field was shown Wednesday aftenoon (when Michigan's varsity beat the eastern visitors 13-9. As Gene Braendle, '33, dove into first base during the game, Yama- shiro, the Japanese baseman, tried Lo tag him with the ball and in the ensuing mix-up Braendle's hand was badly bruised. Spedtators saw Yamashiro immediately apologize. But they did not see him enter the dressing room after the game. He stood at the doorway lhat in hand and asked for Gene Braendle. When Gene appeared Yamashiro, with appropriate ceremony, p re sented him with a baseball bat, manufactured in Tokio, which had been broken during the game, as a further symbol of his regret, that he shared in the injury of the Mich- igan player. Braendle, siuprised. thanked him for the gi t. The Tokio tean captain later pre- seited the Varsitly with a lar ge pen- nant.f DELAYS IN11BUDCET Bitter Surprise Message Asks limmrediate Prograni to Balance Books. WASHINGTON, May 5.-- (1)--In a message burning with crticism of the way Congress has handled the t a x economy program, President Hoover today demanded of the Sen- ate and House a "definite and con- clusive program for balancing the budget." The surprise message came in ther midst of a hum of activity to find new sources of revenue by taxes and savings made necessary by brig cuts in both of these programs by the House, and brought immediate assaults from Democratic leaders and support from administration spokesmen. While the message was being read in both houses, the Senate finance committee sought additional rev- enue by boosting further the nor-f mal income tax rates from the pre- 1 sent one and one-half to four per cent on the first $4,000. A new sur- tax schedule, beginning with one per cent between $6,000 and $10- 000 and graduating up to a maxi- mum of 55 per cent on incomes over a million dollars also was ap- proved. A one per cent sales tax Swas rejected, 12 to . Meanwhile, the House was pass- ing the Hill bill providing for gov- ernment operation of Muscle Shoals if no acceptable privatelease is ob- tained. The Senate turned down a proposal by Senator Frazier R., N. D.) for a year's suspension of military and naval construction. This had ben offered as a substitute for the Hale bill to authorize build- ing the navy up to treaty allow- a necs. KING'S DAUGHTERS 'SELL TAGS TODAY Fuzzy Dog on Lapel to Be Sign of Well-Dressed Man. The "dogs" will take possessifji of Ann Arbor tomorrow, when the Kings Daughters conduct their an- nual drive to raise funds for the hospital school of the University Hospital by a tag sale. The tags will be made in the form of dos and will be sold on the campus as well as throughout the city. More than 8,000 of the tags have been made for this campaign and the organization is confident that they will all be disposed of during the course of the one-day sale. The dogs are all hand made and connsistof ria'id bodieand lc,(-e cov- GASTON B1 MEANS~ EX-JUstice Department Official Accused of False Claims in Lindbergh Baby Hunt. HELD ON $100,000 BOND Wife of Washington Publisher Victimized in Attempt to heal With Abductors. WASHINGTON, May 5.-(P)--The world-wide search for the kid- napped Lindbergh baby was echoed dramatically today in the arrest of Gaston B. Means on a charge of obtaining $100,000 on false repre- sentations that he could obtain the ch ild from his abductor-s. Departinent of Justice ,)gnts arrested the former Justice Depart- nment investigator after a secret inquiry into allegations hat he had been paid the money by Mrs. Ed- ward B. McLean, wife of the pub- lisher of the Washington Post. Mrs. McLean said through her attorney, Albert W. Fox, that Col. Charles A. Lindbergh, father of the kidnapped child, knew of her activities, but that they were kept secret, even from her closest friends. Tells of Weird Rendezvous. The weird negotiations conducted by Mrs. McLean, her attorney said,t led her to Aiken, S.C., where she net Means and a rough-looking in- dividual armed with guns, ,who represented himself to be one of the kidnapping gang. She was told, her attorney added,1 that it would be necessary for her+ to go to El Paso, Tex., as the baby1 was in Mexico. Arriving there, Fox continued,' she -was informed there had been a hitch in the plans and that she1 would have to return to Washing- ton and re-estaplish contact with] the gang, Attorneys Stop Plot.' Later, after additional demandst for money had been made and Mrs. McLean was ready to pawn some of her jewelry to raise aditional funds, her attorneys learned of the negotiations, Fox said, and put a stop to them.' A demand was made upon Means to return the $100,000, Fox added, and he was given until last Wed- nesday to do so. Upon his failure, attorneys for Mrs. McLean went to the Department of Justice and told the story, Fox said. Arraigned be- fore a United States commissionerf late today, Means, who served more1 than three years in the AtlantaE Penitentiary for accepting a bribe and for conspiracy to violate the1 National Prohibition Act, pleaded1 not guilty.; Leo A. Rover, United States dis- trict attorney asked $100,000 ail.I SLATER KNOCKS OUTI 2IN A. A. U4 BOUT Michigan Heavyweight Lays Low+ Both Foes in First Round to Lead Tourney. ; NEW YORK, May 5.-(P)-; Jack Slater of Michigan knock- ed out Earl Sather, of Minne- apolis, in 55 seconds of the first round. This advances him to thefourth round. NEW .YORK, May 5.- (P)-Jack Slater, giant boxer from the Uni- versity of Michigan, was the out- standing heavyweight of the Na- tional A.A.U. bouts today, taking. the play completely from the high- ly-touted Yale tackle, Jack Kilcul- len. Slater hammered down Jack Moran of Philadelphia, in a single round to draw all the cheers of thek Asociate d Pcn I)uiliching raitis failed to wash out the annual May day demonstra-. tion of New York communists. In contrast to similar parades of other years there were no arrests and hardly any disorders. It was estimated that 35,000 took part in the rally. Lawyers Will Dance in Novel Setting The final word in picturesque T S NAS COMMUNISTS HOLD RALLY IN RAIN and romantic settings for campus' dances will be written tonight at the lawyers' club spring party when student couples will walk in the Cook quadrangle and sit beneath the gothic towers of the recently completed legal research libraryI between dances.! "Buzz" Hoyt with his Toledo or- chestra will furnish music for the affair. Hoyt has just returned to the United States after spendingl most of the winter in Havana where he led his band in a number of dance and country club engage- ments. Prof. John Tracy, Prof. Edwin Dickinson, Prof. Paul A. Liedy, and Prof. John B. Waite have been in- vited to attend, it was anounced by Edward M. Welch, '32L, chairman of the dance. Jap Commander Says Troops Will Evacuate SHANGHAI, May 5. -- (AP) - The Japanese high command announc- ed tonight that evacuation of the troops that fought the battle of Shanghai already had been ordered in accordance with the terms of a formal armistice signed earlier in the day by emissaries of Chinese and Japanese governments. The signing of the truce was a most unusual procedure. It was necessary to carry the document to two sickbeds. Comedy Club Elects No Naval Disciplina'ry Action to Be Taken Against Slayer, Secretary Adams Says. WASHINGTON, May 5. -- (A) -- Obviously intent upon concluding the Fortescue-Massie slaying case, Secretary Adams today said no disciplinary action would be taken against the Naval men involved. Lieut. Thomas H..Massie was order- ed to duty in San Francisco. Plans in Congress to give legis- lative relief to the four persons convicted of slaying an Hawaiian accused of attacking Massie's wife meanwhile were allowed to rest. Hawaii Slayers to Leave Islands Forever Sunday HONOLULU, May 5. -- (U") --The living victim of Hawaii's most famous episode of crime, Mrs. Thalia Massie, and the four persons: who took a life to avenge her honor prepared today to leave the Islands forever. And while they made ready to say "Aloha," Clarence Darrow, aged attorney for Mrs. Granville Fortes- cue and three Navy men, convicted of manslaughter in the killing of Joseph Kahahawai, pleaded with Gov. Lawrence M. Judd for a full pardon for the quartet. All were given commutations yesterday after serving one hour of their 10-year terms. SY1STEM WOULD, DEFER PLEDGING FOR TWO WEEKS Interfraternity G r o u p Must Pass Bill Twice More, ALUMNI MAY HELP Council Members Sure That Senate Will Pass Measure. by Carl S. Forsythe The "Back to First Semester Pledging" plan as presented last night to 60 campus fraternities by' a special committee headed by Charles T. Kline, '32, business manager of The Daily, was ac- cepted with enthusiasm by the Interfraternity Council group di- rectly after a short discussion of the proposed system, its merits, and the general situation existing within the Greek orders. The pro- posal will have to be passed two times more by the body before it will be sent to the administra- tion, One hour following the presenta- tion, the new system was approved by all houses present, and the com- mittee was instructed by Council members to seek alumni aid and guidance in getting the plan before the Senate Committee on Student Affairs, the body which must ap- prove the system before It can become effective for the rushing period next fall. Members of the Council were certain last night that the plan would meet with the approval of the Senate committee since all of the houses have agreed that the proposed system would alleviate the evils of the old, and at the same time include the commendable fea- tures of the existing plan. The proposed plan, a modification of the existing system, includes the following by-laws and regulations: 1. Freshmen are not to be rushed during Orientation week. No rush- ing shall take place until after 12 o'clock noon on the Saturday at the end of the week in the first :semester. 2. Rushing will begin at that time, and may continue through Thurs lay of the second week following. 3. Pledging~ will be done through I the dean's office at the end of the two weeks. Initiations can be held in February. 4. Rushing engagements may be held any time during the day until 3:30 p. in. No rushing shall take place after this time excepting phone calls for the purpose-of mak- ing dates. 5. No binding promises regarding f ledging shall be entered into - bween the fraternity and rushee during the rushing period. 6. The period from 8:30 p. m. of Thursday of the second week of (Continued on Page 2) - Bishop Hampton Will Give Talk Here Today "Psycho-analysis" will be the sub ject of the address to be made by Bishop Charles F. Hampton of the Liberal Catholic Churchat 4:15 to- day in room D of alumni memoral hall. At 8 o'clock in the evening, Bishop Hampton will speak at the Union on the subject, "Health and Spiritual Life." The programs are sponsored by the Student Theosop- hical Club, and are open to the pub- lic. Dr. Carr to Addres Fettes as President Mrs. Masse said that her hus- h dr L~if "ht hn H- M\s~i hor Howard L. Fettes, '33, of Detroit, will head Comedy club as president during the coming school year as a result of elections held yesterday afternoon at a meeting of the or- ganization in the league. Other officers chosen were: Mary L. Pray, '34, vice-president, Ann Vernor, '33, secretary, and James Raymond, '33, treasurer. oana , ieu llOmas . wassie, !ery mother, Mrs. Granville Fortescue, and the two Naval men involved in the slaying, would sail for Sant Francisco Sunday. The young victim of the brutal attack which led to the killing of Joseph Kahahawai, thus indicated that she would not remain here to appear once more against the four remaining men still facing trial. Two points will be awarded for each of the first three events, while threce points will be given to tOw class winning the last ei("nt. march in a body to the lHollow car- ring a huge "pot" which they have constiucted. Throughout the week they have been working gathering wood for the bonfire. As wood is particularly scarce this year, sopho- mores were urged last night by Louis Colombo, '33, in charge of Cap Nifl-._ nnolto buretthe wood bforcI meeting for appointment of the managing editor and business i mager of The Michigan Daily, tHe Miehiganensian, and the Ga rgoyle the week of May 15, 1932?. Each applicant for a position is requested to file seven copies of his letter of application at the board office in the Press building not later than May 12 for the use of the members of the board. Carbon copies, if leg- ible, will be satisfactory. Each ROOSEVELT GROUP SEEKING GARNER FOR VICE-PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE NEW YORK, May 5.-P(AI)--Serious consideration is being given to the possibility of offering John M. Gar- ner the Democratic vice presiden- tial nomination and lining up Gar- ner's Presidential support behind Franklin D. Roosevelt, it was learn- ed tonight in the Roosevelt camp. I Garner's vietorv in the three-cor- No oventures have been made, however, to Garner as yet, it was said. The possibility of the Roosevelt- Garner combine was mentioned in "Washington by Sen. James Hamil- ton Lewis, favoritte son in Illinois, which has 58 convention votes. James A. Farley, field marshal of the Roosevelt forces. said nthinm-