ESTABLISHED 1890 j. t q rtan . ti ;I# MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS VOL. XLII. No. 162. SIX PAGES ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, MAY 14, 1932 WEATHER: Partly cloudy, Warmer. PRICE FIVE CENTS -. - _________________________ OHIO STATE BEATS ICHIGAN NINE, 8-4 IN TENSESTRUGGLE Steady Pitching and Hitting of Wrigley, State Pitcher, Wins for Buckeyes. TO PLAY AGAIN TODAY Wolverines Tie Score in Last Half of Eighth Inning But Visitors Take Lead. By Sheldon C. Fullerton A long white ago, someone made the remark that pitchers couldn't, hit. On the whole the facts have substantiated the theory, but it isn'thard to see that Lowell Wrig- ley fails to put much stock in the statement. Just because Wrigley chose to be original and do a little hitting on his own accor'd Michi- gan dropped a 6-4 ball game to Ohio State yesterday, and went hurtling from the top of the Big Ten standings. Michigan, thanks to Wrigley's steady pitching, was trailing when they came to bat in the final half of the eighth, but before the third out was made they had combinled two hits, one a fluke triple, with an' error and a wild pitch to even the count. It remained for Harley Mc- Neal, the Wolverine moundsman, to retire the Buckeyes in their half of the ninthhto give the Maize and Blue a real chance for the victory. Wrigley Makes Three Hits. Hale and Sharp, the first two Buckeye batters to face McNeal in the ninth were easy, but Wrigley, the third man up, decided to takeC matters in his own hands. He al- ready had made a double and a single in his first three trips to the plate, but that didn't stop him from poling another long two bagger out to left field. Widler, not to be out- done, came through with another hit, Gutter and Baumgartner walk- cd, Wand Peppe followed with still' another single to give the Buckeyes a three run lead going into the last half of the ninth. The Wolverines made a valiant effort to even the count again in the ninth. Manuel came through with a solid hit to left field, went to second on McNeal's infield out, and scored when pinch hitter Wist- Michigan will meet Ohio State for the last game of the two game series at 2:30 o'clock this afternoon at Ferry field.; Spot Where Body of Kidnapped Baby Was Found SEARHCHERS FOR BABY SLAYERS INCREASE ACTIVITIES AS HOllO R Colonel Lindbergh Identifies Body Before Cremation; Believe Child Was Killed Soon After Kidnapping. IlOPEWELL. N.J., May 13. - (AP) - The picture of a xather standing alone before the body of his slain son, a mother secluded in grief and a President calling for action inspired the mightiest law enforcement agencies of the Nation tonight to catch the murderers of the Lindbergh baby. Meanwhile, the searchers held the growing belief that the crim- inals who stole the infant March 1 sought ransom after they had killed him. The focal point of this school of thought was the white sleeping suit the child wore on the night of the kidnapping. This was missing when the body, wasted to a skeleton, was stumbled upon in a woods This Associated Press telephoto shows the found nearly two and one-half months after was in a bad state of decomposition. It was newspapermen and spectators viewing the the most famous kidnapping case in history. identified by fragments of clothing similar to spot in the woods near Mount Rose, N.J., where The body was discovered by William Allen, a those worn by the infant prior to the kid- Negro, and occupants of a transfer truck on a the body of Charles A. Lindbergh, jr., was country crossroads. The body, when found, napping. jBox Score) j 'p '! a r OHIO STATE ! Widler, 2b.. Gutter, ss...... Baumgartner, cf . Peppe, rf....... Vidis, rf ......... Fichter, 1b ..... Dolch; if ....... Hale, 3b ......... Sharp, c ....... Wrigley, p.... .. AB R 4 1 .3 1 4 1 5 0 0 0 5 0 4 0 3 1 2 0Q 4 2 H 2 0 3 2 0 0 1 0 0 3 PO 1 1 1 1. 0 16, 2 1: 3 1' A 4 3 0 0 0 2 0 3 2 5 E 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 Total........34 6112719 2 MICHIGAN AB Ferguson, if ..... 3 Waterbor, s..... 4 Artz, rf .......... 4 Tompkins, cfi .... 4 Superko, 3b......3 Diffley, c ........ 4 Daniels, 2b .......3 Manuel, lb .....:.4 McNeal, p ....... 4 *Wistert ......... 1 "*Petoskey.1.....1 R 0 1 0 0 I. 0 1 1 0 0 0 H: 0 0 1 2 0 2 1 1 0 PO A 2 0 0 3 1 0 1 1 3 0 7 2 5 2 7 0 1 4 0 0 0 0 E 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 ert drove a sharp single to the same spot. With Petoskey batting for Waterbor and Artz and Tompkins on deck chances didn't look too bad, but the best Petoskey could do was to pop into a double play,. Gutter to Fichter. Wistert was caught napping way off the bag,' and was an easy out when he fell in an awkward attempt to scramble back'to safety. McNeal off Form. Harley McNeal was distinctly off form against the Ohioans. After holding them hitless for the first two innings he weakened in the third to give them two runs on three hits, a sacrifice, and a pair of free passes to first. Wrigley also inserted a single in this rally, wiile another Buckeye slugger, Baum- gartner, drove out the first of his three hits of the afternoon. Michigan had held a one run advantage until this inning. In the second frame Diffley singled, and went to second when Daniels was hit by a pitched ball. Manuel forced Diffley on a hit to Fichter, but Daniels was safe at second on the play. When McNeal lashed a sharp single over second Daniels came scampering home with the first score of the game.Bu In the eighth inning the Buck- eyes added anotherrun. With one out, Baumgartner doubled to left center and went to third when Ferguson fumbled the ball. 'Then, on Waterbor's error of Peppe's rol- ler, Baumgartner crossed the plate. Fluke Triple Ties Score. In the last of the eighth Water-' bor reached first on an error, moved around on two outs, and scored on Superko's single. Then, when Peppe. chose to try for a shoestring catch of Mike Diffley's short fly, the ball eluded him and slipped through for a fluke triple that sent Superko across the plate with the tying run. Lowell Wrigley pitched a nice Total........35 4 8 27 12 2 *Batted for Ferguson in the 9tth. *Batted for Waterbor in the 9th. Ohio State .........002 000 013-61 Michigan ...........010 000 021-4 Two base hits-Artz, Widler, Wrigley 2, Baumgartner. Three base. hit-Diffley. Stolen base-Superko. Sacrifice hit-Sharp. Struck out by Mc.Neal 6; by Wrigley 4. Bases on balls--off McNeal 6; off Wrigley 2.' Hit by pitcher-by Wrigley (Dan- iels). Double plays-McNeal to Dan- iels, Gutter to Fichter. Wilde pitch -Wrigley. Left on bases-Ohio State 8, Michigan 7. BUSINESS SCHOOL1 ALMNITOMEET' Banquet, Discussions, Speeches to Feature Fourth Annual Conference Today. Alumni of the Business Adminis- tration school will hold their fourth annual conference today at the Un- ion. Besides the regular business session, a luncheon is pianned for noon and a banquet tonight will end the conference. The business session of the alum- ni will begin at 9:30 o'clock this inorning.- At 10 o'clock group dis- cussions on banking and invest- ments, marketing and sales man- agement, and accounting will take place. These discussions, to be led by faculty men and alumni, will be of the round-table discussion type. Dean Clare E. Griffin, of the bus- iness administration school, will preside at the luncheon to begin at 12:15. President Alexander G. Ruth- ven will speak at the luncheon. During the afternoon free tickets to the baseball game and to the University golf course will be sup- plied the alumni. A . .I- - I _ _. - . . . . - ..L 0 . r teem r rim W L Demanded for V IVADISON, Wis., May 13.-(P)- President Glenn Frank today said, "As long as I am president of the University of Wisconsin no limited group in this state will turn the university into its tool without knowing it has been through a fight." The president at a special con- vocation of students thus accepted a challenge in recent attacks on the institution. The university had been accused of foistering communism and so- cialism by John B. Chapple of Ash- land, Wis., editor and, a conserva- NEAR lRISH COAST Transatlantic Flyer Forced Down Because of Cracked Wing, Fuel Shortage. S. S. PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT, May 13.--(P)--Lou Reichers, the transoceanic flier, was rescued from t h e turbulent Atlantic off the southern tip of Ireland tonight by a lifeboat crew from the President Roosevelt. The New Jersey speed flier was forced to drop his wind buffeted monoplane into the ocean near the liner because of a cracked wing, damaged fuselage and fuel short- age. He suffered a broken nose and lacerated face in alighting. The lookout on the bridge sighted the plane fluttering to the surface at 9:10 p. m. Greenwich mean time (4:10 p. m. Eastern Standard Time), and Chief Officer Harry Manning immediately prepared to take aboard the occupant of the ship despite high seas and a dan- gerous southwest wind. The sea was running too high to salvage either the life boat or the plane. The pilot Reicher4 was placed im- mediately under the care of the ship's surgeon. 'BI TENNIS TEAM BEATS ADRIAN, 9-0 Wolverines Show Superiority by Winning Most Matches, 6-0. (Special t oThe Daily) ADRIAN, Mich., May 13.-Michi- gan's 'B' tennis team scored a slam over the Adrian Varsity here today, 9-0. The Wolverines won most of their matches With a 6-0 score, so complete was their superiority. SUMMARIES Singles: Nifen (M) defeated Den- son (A) 6-1, 6-0. Appelt (M) de- Visconsin by Frank tive Republican candidate for Uni- ted States senator . in numerous speeches in Wisconsin and other states. Speakers representing the Wis- c o n s i n Republican Crusaders, of which Mr. Chapple is chairman, al- so have attacked the university. "The university is not worth the investment; mde e payers money unless it maintains its freedom from the external con- trol of cliques," President Frank asid. "And as long as I am its pres- ident, I shall fight for this free- dom to deal effectively with the life of the mind and the life of the state regardless of personal cost to myself or political support for the university itself." Frank denied the charges, which he termed an "insincere, un-princi- pled and dishonest campaign of de- liberate slander by a little handful of ambitious men." The president said the university does not teach atheism but that in one course the nontheistic con- ception is stated along with others. President Frank, who once served in the pulpits of Missouri villages, said the university is deeply con- cerned with the religious life of its students. The president said the over- whelming majority of students of the university are "clean in mind and decent in morals." Bulletin SUNNYVALE, Cal., May 13. -(/P)-The navy dirigible Ak- ron landed at the west coast naval base here at 6:55 p. m. (9;55 p. m. Eastern Standard Time) tonight completing its transcontinental journey begun from Lakehurst, N. J., last Sun- day. IT'WINNERSON MAY 28 Dean Lovett of Chicago to Give Lecture at Presentation of Hopwood Awards. Announcement of the winners of the major and minor awards in the Avery and Jule Hopwood _,creative writing contest will be made at 4:30 o'clock, Thursday afternoon, May 26, at which time Dean Robert Morss Lovett, of the University of Chicago, will deliver a lecture on the subject "Creative writing on a University campus." The Hopwood contest, awarding the largest amount of prize money of any collegiate writing contest, closed last month with more than 125 contestants submitting more than 150 manuscripts. The greatest number was entered in the field of drama although the contest em- braces writings in fiction, the essay and poetry as well as drama. Dean Lovett, giving the lecture at the awarding of the prize money, is well known as an author and a scholar. For the last several years he has been on the editorial board of the magazine, "The New Repub- lic." He has written several novels as well as treatises on English lit- erature and criticism. This year is the first time that a lecture has been given in connec- tion with the announcement of the .winners in the contest, but the in- tention of the committee in charge, it was announced, is to have emi- nent writers and critics speak at the announcement each year. Plans for the contest next year, have not been decided upon but it is predicted that the contest will be condmucte( . m the same manner as it has :L the last two years. TO BE HELD SUNDAY Rev. Henry Lewis Will Officiate at Services at 4 o'Clock Sunday Afternoon. Services for Dr. R. Bishop Can- field, who met his end suddenly early Thursday morning in a tragic highway accident, will be held at 4 o'clock Sunday afternoon at the residence at 1830 Washtenaw Ave. Rev. Henry Lewis of St. Andrew': Episcopal church will officiate anc the interment will be held at Forest Hill cemetery, it was learned yes- terday. The pall bearers who were announced yesterday include Dr. D. I. Loree, Nathan Potter, John Walz. Dr. Frederick G. Novy, Dr. Udo J. Wile, Dr. Alvan Lore, Dr. Jame Bruce, and Dr. William Marley. A number of important pointi were brought out at an inquest held yesterday. Fred Clark, of Jackson whose truck was directly in front of Dr. Canfield's car when the crass occurred gave two reasons for not notifying authorities in Ann Arboi of the accident; he had no money to make a phone call and second it did not occur to him to stop in Ann Arbor since all loaded trucks are routed by way of the cut off on ac- count of a city ordinance. An autopsy held yesterday con- firmed the opinion generally held that death was caused by injuriez received in the wreck and not as#a result of a stroke as was conjec- tured at one time. The ship on which Dr. Canfield's daughter, Barbara and Dr. Albert C. Furstenburg and Mrs. Fursten- burg were traveling to Europe hak been reached by radio and plans have been made by the party to: return immediately from Gibralter, the first port of call. Dr. Fursten- burg has been the associate and a very close friend of Dr. Canfield's for a number of years. The party will arrive in Ann Arbor by May 24, it is expected. Costumes of All Kinds Feature Annual Dance Dressed in costumes of all kinds -gigolo, buccaneer, Arab, Spanish dancers, bowery-several hundred, ay a Negro truckman yesterday, ess than five miles from the Lind- Bergh home. A garment purporting to be this same sleeping suit was the "token" by which Col. Charles A. Lindbergh and his seventy-two-year-old agent, Dr. John F. Condon, were brought .o pay $50,000 ransom in the murky darkness of a New York City ceme- tery. In Trenton Morgue. These were the cnlient. facts scrutinized by New Jersey's detec- gives gathered at a distance from the Trenton morgue where the fa- mnous flier him2'elf identified his dead son. Haggard and worn, Cl. Lind- bergh called upon his most intimate :riend, Col. Henry Bre kenridge, to Irive him by auto to Trento. When he entered the room where the body lay, the coroner, Walter 3. Swayze, inquired: "Col. Lindbergh, do you positively dentify this baby?" A covering obscured all but the ace of the child. '"Take that off," requested ..t :olonel in a low tense tone. An attendant complied and all xcept the colonel retired from the :oom. "It is positively the baby," said ol. Lindbergh after a minute in- ;pt 4ion, Ht was inside the morgue for ,alf an hour. Just before he left a iearse drew up. The body was ;laced inside and taken to a crema- ory it Linden. Col. Lindbergh fol- owed m another machine. It was aid crenation touk place at once. q Months Old When a cierk in the City Hall at Prenton earlier in the day wrote )ut the cremation permit, he added >ractically the last chapter in the ragic story of the baby Charles lugustus Lindbergh, Jr., who was :illed before he was 21 months old. But officialdom-backed by out- :aged public opinion and spurred >y President Hoover himself into naking this the most intensive nan hunt the world has evei known -displayed a desire to Write a equel to the story. The call from the White House or a search "never to be relaxed until those criminals are implacably )rought to justice" was their cam- )aign cry. As the search spread far and vide, some evidence of a diabolioal moax on the part of the killer-kid- '1appers was seen in a statement by Dr. Condon. Same Sleeping Suit. He told officials he was convinced the sleeping suit turnedover to ;1m was the same one the flier's son wore the night he was snatched from the crib. He received the garment nearly a nonth after the abduction. Medical authorities have agreed he kidnappers killed their victim aimost immediately after making )ff with him-probably the same light. Police finally said the suit fur- fished to Dr. Condon was "the ame kind" as that the Lindbergh child wore. Although they aled it still was ncertain whether the garment the ntermediary received was the one he Lindberghs had rvr hased for their son, an ugly aspc twas cast an the case which would not be quickly dispelled. This theory is that the kidnap- pers, believed to fye been maniacs, almost immediat1ly after stealing the baby from the crib where he had lain ill, stripped off his sleeping suit murderd him .et th hnrlvv couples, to the music of Slatz Ran- SLAP DASH PRODUCTION HAS RUINED dall and his Brunswick recording SCREEN ART, VIOLET HEMING STATES orchestra, danced from 9 to 2 at the Architect's Ball in the Union. High pressure, slap dash methods ands of dollars waste as it some- The ballroom was asplendor with in modern movie production have times does. On the other hand he brightly colored discs, on which absolutely ruined the screen as a is scrupulously prompt about arriv- lights of different colors played. means of real artistic expression ing for work at the scheduled hour The grand march, at 11:30, was led in the field of drama in the opinion in the morning. by Floyd R. Johnson, '32A, of Bal- of Violet Heming celebrated stage There is only one good purpose boa Heights, Canal Zone, and Mis and screen artist who arrived in which motion pictures seem to be Evelyn Miller, of Grand Rapids. A Ann Arbor from Hollywood yester- serving in the opinion of Miss Hera- skit by freshmen architects follow- day for work on the annual drama- ing. They are taking away the most ed the march. tic season which opens May 23. unintelligent portion of the audi- With the easy friendliness so fre- ences which attend the legitimate TLeft Renews Search quently encountered in people of~ theatre. This gives them more o the theatre Miss Heming poured the sort of "pigs and flowers and for Stolen Clothing out a good natured diatribe against sunshine" sort of drama which they producers who give their actors seem to desire and at the same The theft of several articles of about five minutes to rehearse a time liberates the stage for produc- clothing from a residence at 520 scene before actual "shooting" is ing more interesting things. North Main street sometime Thurs- scheduled to begin. As an illustra- There are more hits running in' s tion of the hurried thoughtlessness New York now than during any day night renewed the search that which pervades the studio, Miss other time within the past five or local police have been carrying on Heming told of a recent picture on six seasons, she brought out in sup-Ifor the past week. The articles which she worked where the direc- port of a belief that the spoken stolen were a suit of clothes, a pair tor took a whole reel of film show- I drama was starting in on a period ing her in Russian and then forgot of great expansion and prosperity, of oxfords and three shirts. S a th Rmci n-+nrt fitt+ d i+er I Tho nnnitinn of 1lgiimate macmtin- Police Tuesday exnressed the be-F