I 5TABLISHED 1890 Or t 4 a1133 MEMBER~ IASSOCIATE [I PRESS' No. 101 SIX PAGES ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1932 Weather: Cloudy, Warmer. PRICE 4FIVE udent Council 7otes Revisions in Constitution Elect Spphomores For Three-Year Term. TE UNANIMOUS cal charges in the consti- of the Student Council, to or the partial perpetuation ear to year of membership, dopted last night by this articles, passed unani- by the Council, must be ed by the Senate Commit- Student Affairs before they officially incorporated into stitution. The Senate Com- will vote on the proposed s tonight. 'ee Year Terms Planned. new, rules provide that four s be chosen each year from homore class to serve until aduation. These men are to ed by an all campus vote regular winter elections. ill serve on the Council dur- second semester of their ore year with full privileges bership but will not be al- o vote. After the beginning r junior year, up until the graduation, they will have believed by the Council that members serve a term of I a half years will result in ecoming better acquainted ie workings of the campus DEFERRED RUSHING MAY' B E ALTER ED Important Meeting Slated 7:30 Tonight at Union, Gould Announces. for r, the council will be minating committee. minations may be lidates presenting a by at least one hun- es May Serve. embers returning to 7 to take graduate be elected by the nbership. embers of the Co n- Managing Editof of e president of the he president of the Council. These, with vice-president, and e Council, shall com- nating committee. evolutionary change article five, section students of soph- g, one of whom must in the Engineering be ele'cted each win- Such members shall hereinafter provided wo and a half years. Qll have all the pow- of other members of ith the exception of, power shall 'be at- thing junior stand- Important changes in the defer- red rushing rules and initiation re-1 quirements seemed imminent last night with the calling of a special meeting o f the Interfraternity Council, to be held at 7:30 o'clock tonight in the Union, by Howard Gould, -'32, secretary-treasurer of the Interfraternity Council. The meeting was caleld directly following a session of the Judiciary Committee of the Interfraternity Council. Gould was given permis- sion by this body to call the meet- ing for tonight since President Howard T. Worden, '32, was absent. Gould stated that it was abso- lutely necessary that every general fraternity have delegates present at the special meeting as important changes, directly concerned with the welfare of Michigan fraterni- ties, would be voted upon. 'Anthony and Anna' Praised by Actress. Relative to Comedy cl fts "An- thony and Anna" which opens to- morrow night at the Mendelssohn theatre, Miss Jesse Bonstelle, direc- tor of the Detroit Civic theatre stated in an interview yesterday' that the work of St. John Ervine contained as a rule a superfluity of beautiful language and sparkling humor. Miss Bonstelle praised the choice of "Anthony and Anna" and expressed the hope that she could get to Ann Arbor for the opening night.' Box office ticket sale for the show, which has been in progress for the past two days has indicated a con- siderable campus interest' in St John Ervine's dramas "Anthony and- Anna" has been called a high com- edy of bad manners. Track Stars Passed by Eligibility Body in Special Session Coach Charles Hoyt paraded his track stars before a special session of tlhe eligibility committee and had the pleasure of formal approval of all of his athletes that were called before the committee., One trackman was refused, but he has never been eligible in three years on the campus. His name was withheld temporarily, and several were subject to making up incom- pletes into passing marks. Western Conference eligibility rules are de- termined by the. Big Ten officials but each University has a special committee to place the stamp of formal approval on all athletes, if they have the needed gradds. Coach Hoyt did not ask those ofj his squad who he knew to be al- ready ineligible to report to the Committee. All of. the regulars and those who were previously declared eligible were brought before the committee however. One wrestler, whose name is also withheld, will probably be declared ineligible. Scores Dry Fanatics Ritchie Flays in Talk at By FrankI Prohibition; and jobs have bec presidential carppaign, Albert Cab told a capacity !crowd of students noon speaking on the third of th sponsored by the Union. Repeating his stand on state the liquor situation of the country, perance of our people is impaired threatened through an attempt to lation, by putting the question o where it ought not to be, instead of leaving it up to the states, where it ought to be." Police Power Cited. He stated that thisputa police , power in the constitution which Associated Press Photo had no right to be there since no Albert C. Ritchie hard and fast ru'le could be univer- sally applied. A virtual attack pon the man- agement of the nation while under Student Dri ing the regime o f President Hoover was made by the Governor. "We see Here Not Jer'Io'us, a government of law, under which , * men at least know what their rights Ritchie Discovers are, superseded by a government of - -commissions, until men do not By David M. Nichol know whether they have any rights No "deplorable situation" in con- at all, until, to paraphrase what nection with the liquor laws of the Selden said, the size of the commis- United States exists in the colleges sioner's foot seems to be the rule and universities of the country in of the decision. the eyes of Albert C. Ritchie, four "Perahps the whole tendency in times governor of Maryland and government at the present time," avowed wet candidate for the Dem- he said, "may be summed up as ocratic nomination, who was inter-_ viewed following his talk at the History, said. Horatio Abbott, Union yesterday. member of the national demo- "I see no evidence for statements cratic committee from Mich- of this nature although," he ad- igan, in intro ucing the Gover- mitted, '"my, experience with col- nor of Maryland yesterday, may egesanduniversities of the present repeat itself.a day has been rather limited. rpa tef "But the situation cannot be too Forty years ago, he said, Gro- bad~ut he addd,"i ave been i ver Cleveland came to Ann Ar- bad,~,eaddfrIhvebe n bar and, annoiunced his inten- Ann Arbor for an hour and a half and have ,not found a drink yet." sion t o run for president. Thd Gvenor hesidatdr tonk yeTwenty years ago Woodrow The Governor hesitated to say Wilson came to Ann Arbor and a'nything definitely about the pre- intimated that he might choose ent prosperityo President oovunr to run. Today Albert C. Ritchie He gave as his reason for this hesi- comes to Ann Arbor andto tancy that "they change their plans speak on presidential issues. so 'much over in Washington that And, concluded Abbott, they you don't know what they will do are all good democrats. next." "The college student," the Mary- one which aims for the minimum land governor stated, "will play an of freedom and a maximum of gov- important role in the coming elec- ernment, instead of a minimum of tions. I had-not thought of appeal- government and a N maximum of ing to him on any particular issue freedom." for as a matter of fact, I will make Liberty, Government Contrasted. no special appeal to any class." Governor Ritchie traced the po- He pointed out that this increas- litical problem thrdugh the ages, ing interest on the part of the stu- pointing out that the greatest dif- dents .as an "fine thing" but that ficulty has always been to reconcile it had fit been apparent before'the the powers of the government with elections of 1928. the liberties of the individual. "Always," he asid, "the .govern- I to Sign Crowley ment has overwhelmed liberty be- owa Cy cause there was no sovereign pow- as Football Mentor er superior to government which UNCOVERS PARTY PALACE Dry Laws Union For gum B. Gilbretl come the major issues of the 1932 el Ritchie, governor of Maryland, and townspeople yesterday after- e series of public addresses being s rights, particularly in regard to , Governor Ritchie said, "The tem- and the morals of our youth are mix up morals, politics, and legis- of prohibition in the constitution, Structure Represents Earliest City Occupation of by Parthians. Excavation by the University of Michigan's expedition at Seleucia- on-the-Tigris of a third level palace representing the earliest Parthian occupation of the city which began about the middle of the second cen- tury B. C., was revealed yesterday by Dr. Leroy Waterman, head of the party, in the first official reports. This work, the fourth season at the excavation, began in September and ended last month. According to the report, "the main'effort of the season was devoted to the 'Pal- ace Block' in the heart of the city and resulted in the clearing and de- fining of a third palace directly be- neath the two discovered at the first and second levels, excavated in previous seasons." A fourth 'level lying beneath this palace, which reaches back anoth- er century and a half and belongs to the original Hellenistic city, was probed but nowhere fully explored. Material recovered this season consists of epigraphical fragments, over one hundred new types of Parthian pottery, and a large col- lection of Greek bullae. Coins and jewelry, composed of gold and semi-precious stones, have been ob- tained. Dr. Waterman, in discussing the s , (Continued on Page 2) RADICAL H 'ITS WALL Blanchard Likens Big Business Methods to Capone Racketeering. Likening the business tactics of John D. Rockefeller, Bob Stewart, Eugene Grace, and Harry Sinclair to the sawed-off shotgun methods of Gangster Al Capone, Paul Blanchard,' director of the' New: York City' Affairs committee, in a lecture here last night declared; that racketeering in the higher circles of business constitutes a greater menace than the present I ' 1 J 7 i i .. : t t ,: Japanese Beate as Chinese For( eO T .akes Otes Chinese Defenders Open Counter - A Japan . t Double Expeditionary Strength in Manchuria. Japanese shock troops, repeatedly repulsed in their c attempts to break the Chinese line north of Kiangwan, lau desperate attack in the darkness before dawn this morning. They were beaten back again, and the Chinese defenders ly seizing the offensive, made a counter-attack. Heavy shell laid down by the Japanese to break up this assault. The Japanese onslaught had been a surprise, as previo Japanese command had admitted their failure at Kiangwa. Complete Swim Intramural Preliminaries ie S ulletins vVILLE, Feb. 23-(P)-- here have been closed be- an epidemic of mild influ- IOWA CITY, Ia., Feb. 23-(IP)- The Press-Citizen said today James Crowley, of Michigan State, would sign as head football coach at the University of Iowa within the next two days. The paper said three representa- tives of the Iowa Athletic Board conferred with Crowley Monday in, Chicago and that final details of salary and assistant coaches had been discussed. Crowley had the contract, the paper indicated. Management Closes Old Whitney Theatre The Whitney theatre, dark almost continually since the old Union op- era adys, was closed again yester- day when Louis R. Gomberg, '31L, udner whose management the the- atre has been showing German- produced films for the last month, announced that patronage had been fnsufficient to permit contin- ued showings. The last picture on the Whitney program was "Der Weg zur Schande," which opened Sun- day. . 23-(RP)-Dr. C. e health commis- y that increasing fuenza in many was not being ac- increase in pneu- ibed the contagion could protect the individual against an excess of governmental author- ity." He stated that the United States undertook to solve, the problem through a political system whereby the liberties of the people no long- (Continued on Page 2) 'SADLER TO, DISCUSS WATER'WAgYPLANS Dean Will. Talk on St. Lawrence Project at Sigma Rho Tau Meeting Tonight. Dean H. C. Sadler of the engi- neering school will address mem- bers of Sigma Rho Tau, engineers' forensic society, upon the advisabil- ity of completing the St. Lawrence waterway, at their Organization meeting which will be held tonight in the Union. Dean Sadler has been active in matters concerning navigation in and about the United States for the past few years andnis ahmuch quoted authority upon the St., Lawrence project. At the meeting tonight the newly elected members of Sigma Rho Tau will be announced and there will be an eleotion held to fill two offices recently vacated. Tonight's assembly is regarded as Organization night in as much as the debating teams will be named and the debate schedule, which will include Michigan State, Detroit City College, and Detroit Institute of Technology, will be formally an- nounced. The debates will be held in the latter part of March and in the first few weeks of April. Little Flower Priest C'smmnrnn fin 'ni Preliminary events in the annual Interfraternity Swimming cham- pionships sponsored by the Intra- mural department were completed last night with Delta Kappa Epsi- lon and Lambda Chi Alpha c(ialify- ing five men each to lead the other fraternities today, i t was an- nounced. One record fell before the on- slaught of the swimmers and two were tied during the evening. Hess broke the 100-yd. free style record in 63 seconds. The records tied were the Medley Relay and the 200- yd. Relay. Summary of qualifiers: Delta Kappa Epsilon, 5; Lambda Chi Al- pha, 5; Theta Chi, 4; Alpha Kappa Lambda, 3; Theta Xi, 3; Tau Delta Phi, 2; Phi Gamma Delta, 2; Sigma Chi, 1; Pi Lambda Phi, 1. Randolph Adams Pays Honor t Washington A capacity crowd of townspeople and students thronged Hill auditor- ium Monday morning to attend'the exercises held on the occasion of the 200th anniversary of the birth of George Washington. Dr. Randolph G. Adams, director of the William Clements library de- livered the principal address, speak-' ing on "The dignity of George Washington." Dr. Adams, drawing from the great fund of information' concerning American history have given him, painted a word picture of Washington that suggested a_ personality of quiet dignity. corruption in politics. "Al Capone is condenmed," Paul Blanchard said, "because of his control of gambling rackets in Chi- cago but the worst gambling is car- ried on in the business center of the nation, in the heart. of Ameri- can financial life, Wall Street. udied at Michigan. Whe3 I studied Economics here' at the University of Michigan, they told me that speculation is onf thing and gambling another. Since I have learned speculation is merely, successful gambling and vice versa I hope that the Economics depart- ment has changed its theories since I left.', But the greatest rackets, accord- ing to Blanchard, are those withir business corporations. He pointed out that while we revile the politi- cal racketeer we condone the samc( practices in the business world Illustrating his point, he turned tc the famous Teapot Dome case. Ir this affair, he said, Denby, Fall and Daugherty were banished frorr political life forever, but Sinclair; and Doheny continue to hold im- mensely influential positions in business. Doheny last year receiv- ing an honorary degree from the Methodist University of Southern California. Man at Top Flayed. "The only solution," Blanchard said, "to this situation lies in the creation of a social order in which a man may get what he earns and earn what he gets. We have no right, to scorn the man at the bottom who gets his illegal profits with a sawed-off shotgun unless we cut out the man at the top who does the same things with his brains." Gov. Franklin D. Roosevelt could have swept into the White House as a great crusader in an over- whelming landslide if he had chos- en to do so, Blanchard said in the discussion which followed his lec- ture last night. "The nation," he said, "is looking for a man who will drive corruption out of our national system and 'Gov. Roosevelt could have been that man had he used hisposition to crush Tammany but he chose to pussyfoot and now I am afraid it is too late to alter the error." had been expected they w take things quietly pending arrival of more reinforcern from Japan. 11 The Tokyo cabinet decide double the expeditionary raising its strength to 50,000 n Kiangwan Threatened. Repeated attempts were Tuesday by the Japanese to s the Chinese line both nort Kiangwan and at Chapei. Eac sauld was stopped by Chinese chine gunners and infantry with bayonets. There was : hand-to-hand fighting. Robert Short, 27, an Ame aviator, was shot down and by Japanese airmen over Soo( Behind their Kiangwan Japanese engineers worked a speed to build roads over. the i mires to keep up their lines of ply. The decision by the Tokyo ernment to double its Sha: army was reached after report been received telling of the Ch success in stopping the two ions already in the field. Request Refused. Lieut. Gen. Kenkichi Uyeda, anese commander at the fron fused to request reinforcemen under the Samurai code he disdain to ask for help. The anese minister and other aut ties at the scene took the initi Robert M. Short, Amer aviator shot down yester afternoon in Shanghai by J anese planes, is 'not a fori student of the University Michigan, according to offi records. Metropolitan newspapers y terday stated that Short's se ice record contained the d that he had studied civil gineering at the University. In reply to the recent Leag Nations note asking that host be ended, Japan told the L that China is not a respo nation and that it is impossib: longer to keep up the "fiction she is. The Japanese war ministe Associated Press the army to withdraw from Shangh quickly as possible. He denie plans had been made for a time occupation. It is up to F the war minister said, to dete whether complications result Japanese military action in churia. Fighting impended in Mani once again as Gen Tamon n his Japanese forces for a against rebels near the border. HOUSE WO EEA 1 NTWATER, Feb. 232- he body of Lyman H. Wayt, s r ,vered today from Bath fear here. He had been miss- ine Monday. Investigators e apparently broke through e while about his work as a REBUILDING HILL AUDITORIUM STAGE INCLUDED IN-MIMES' OPERA PLANS 'eb. 23 - (-) - Mrs. an, 38, was acquitted court jury tonight of ge for the shooting ['romley, her former over, in the lobby of ing last Nov. 5. Her at she was tempor- NS, Feb. 23-(OP)- er, 68, and his wife, leaded guilty in cir- %r + foli~ir o Acovil Robin Hood' Play ,Requires Changes in Seats, Lights.. A great geren arc fifty feet high and almost a hundred feet across the bottom will entirely transfigure the interior of Hill auditorium when the annual Mimes union op- eretta, Robin Hood, opens March 11. The entire erbuilding of the Hill auditorium stage for Robin Hood is the most ambitious of a number of attempts to adapt the huge audi- torium for the purposes of drama. Hill auditorium was chosen for the Ai m .a -,. u -, h.n.,c. ai great woodland design, Sainted to tie in with the woodland sets which will be used. The conventional proscenium which will cut down the stage size will be used. Three separate sets will be used for the three acts. Among other settings there will be representa- tins of the sheriff's house, the jail, and a church. The green foliage of the borders will be used throughout the opera. Special lighting effects will re- quire an extra heavy duty cable from the outside as well as an ad- LATEST DIAGONAL TAKES UP CASE - AGAINST UNIVERSITY PATERNALISM 3 -_ __ _ _ __ _ _ Dr. 4,- Fisher Considers Student Marriages in Issue. Forms New Finance Con Action Stresses "Re Hoover Rebuff. WASHINGTON, Feb. 23. special Economy Committe a quick means for cutti ernmental expense by at combining or curtailing agencies was created toda; Democratic House. The action emphasized Garner's declaration of Sun the Democrats would nc President Hoover the unlin thority to reorganize the ment that he requested lasi a special message to Congr "Everybody agrees that is necessary," Rep. Miche publican,- Michigan, said, hnwver. that thniirh h, Paternalism, its rise in the Uni- versity, the harm it has done and the attitude of both the faculty and the student body towards it is the theme of the leading article in this month's issue of Diagonal, campus liberal magazine, which goes on sae tomorrow. er article discusses the good and evils of marriage among under- graduates while the case of com- prehensive examinations is taken up by Professor Reed in his article. Carl S. Forsythe, city editor of the Daily, is the author of "Colleg- iate Censorship," the results of an investigation into the field of col- lege newspapers undertaken last semester. In the article Forsythe