Sees Sorority Girls In New House 1 For This Year ill Grou.p Ousted By Fire f Fid Residence; None To le~ave University -() Members of Alpha Gamma Delta, r e- who wvcre turned out of their sorority j Confessed Killer Expects tateiei Agree With Vet Self-Destruction lit Il ie! LOS ANGELES, Calif., Feb. 28.- -A former statement' clos ng the cently-renewed investigation of the house last Sunday morning, due to death of Paul Bern, motion picture fire which destroyed the entire build- executive and husband of Jean -lar- ing, have made few definite plans low, was forecast for today by Dis- for the future, beyond the renting of trict Attorney Burton Fitts, but W. a new house located at 920 Lincoln W. Widenham, foreman of the county for the remainder of the school year., grand jury who reopened the inquiry, Contrary -to expectation, none of gave no indication he would join in it. the Alpha Gamma Delta members The district attorney indicated the were forced to leave school perma- statement will agree with the self- nently after the occurrence. Those destruction verdict of a coroner's in- who went home returned within a quest. Widenham declined to com- week. ment after watching a re-enactment i According to Mary Alexander, '34, of Bern's supposed death in the a member of the sorority, the co-op- Benedict canyon home where he lived eration of deans, faculty members, during the few months he was mar- and students has been greatly appre- rid to the platinum blonde screen ciated. "We are getting along nicely, actress. under the circumstances, due to the Earlier in the day evidences of a aid offered by Miss Lloyd and the party for two at the Bern home dur- others in the dean of women's office," Iing Miss Harlow's absence on the she said. night of the film executive's death "Unfortunately, only two girls in last September were revealed by Mrs. the house were insured for clothing," Winifred Carmichael, a servant, who she continued. "They were Ellen told of the visit of a strange woman Kean,s'34, and myself." who avoided servants. Miss Alexander stated that more srvntdefinite arrangements for building a d Mrs. Carmichael said she heard a feminine scream in the house andI later discovered a wet, yellow wom- an's bathing suit on the edge of a private swimming pool. Nearby were two empty glasses. A piece of cake, she said, intended for Miss Harlow and left in the acress' dressing room,! new house and re-establishing the chapter could be made when advice was received from the national or- ganization. Give Up Plan For Local Showioa Of Detroit Plav was eaten but not by Bern. Mrs. Carmichael said she was not Plans to bring the Bonstelle Civic asked about these things at the cor- Theatre company to Ann Arbor Mon- oner's inquest and consequently did day night for a performance of "An- not tell of them then. Fitts said her other Language," now in its first story added no facts not known at week in Detroit, have been aban- the time of the inquest. doned because of a decision to extend the present run an extra week, Rob-, hayden Criticizes ert Henderson,ndirector of the the- atre, said last night. Philippine iaasure Ending the 1932-33 season of the Detroit organization, "Another Lan- (Continued from ge 1) guage" was to have been presented (otedrPe)at the Michigan Theatre here with be called representing the executive the same cast now appearing.in De- and legislative branches of both the troit. The company includes Patricia American and Philippine govern- Collinge, who has just completed the ment. Speaker Roxas was of the New York run of "Autumn Crocus," opinion that such a conference could in which she was starred., with do little more than has already been Francis Lederer; Lester Vail, star of accomplished. several Henderson Dramatic Festi- The broadcast was one of a weekly vals; and three former University series -on government being offered students, Mr. Henderson, Mildred under the auspices of the Joint Corn- Todd, '32, and Alan Handley, '32. mittee on Civic Education by Radio -- ------ of the National Advisory Council on cal science department, is chairman Radio in Education and the Ameri- of this committee. The series is can Political Science Association. broadcast over the blue network of Prof. Thomas H. Reed, of the politi- the National Broadcasting Company.I -Associated Press Photo "Iggy" Varecha, of Chicago, ac- cording to police has confessed to an orgy of crime that included at least three wanton killings and several other crimes. Former inmate of an institution for mental defectives, Varecha shouted after his confession, "But I am insane!" As D. Moore To Speak At Union On Personality Prof. A. D. Moore of the electrical engineering cdepartment will address a smoker and reception of the Stump Speakers Society tonight in the Union. Stump Speakers Society, local chapter of ,Sigma Rho Tau, national engineers speech society, is to be organized on a new plan this semes- ter, it was said, with the view of edu- cation through speech rather than in speech work. Six groups are to be organized, each with definite subjects for dis- cussion, including recent develop- ments affecting engineers, engineer- ing philosophies, and problem groups in economics, government, and social studies.' All engineering students interested are invited to attend. Free Beer Is Publicity Plan At California Dance BERKELEY, Cal., Feb. 28.-Free beer and free cigarettes with every bid purchased for the University of California Sophomore Informal is the publicity plan of the committee in charge. It is intended to supplement] the "Beer and Beards" idea of the . ance and to attract a record crowc' Crew Safe As Boat Sinks Off Oregon Shore Wind, Tide Force Former Rum Runner Onto Jelly At Mouth Of Columbia ASTORIA, Ore., Feb. 28. - (UT) While her crew of 10 mourned the loss of their captain, surf-battered wreckage was all that remained today of the former rum runner Pescawha. On her way to sea for the first time in seven years, the 40-foot craft, at last an "honest" whaling boat, was swept by strong wind and cur- rent Monday night onto the sharp rocks of the north jetty at the mouth of the Columbia river. Then she was swung around the jetty's head and onto the sands of Peacock spit. There seething surf pounded a spectacular finish to the boat's spectacular career Capt. Victor 14. Riley of Portland, owner and master of the former liquor carrier, which was manned by a "land lubber" crew, attempted to launch the boat's small dory andt was carried to sea by a large wave, Others aboard, including the mate, Thomas F. Haskell of Portland, leaped over the side and was washed to safety on the beach. Three coast guards from the Cape Disappointment and Point Adams stations, who had futilely attempted to save the crew while the Pescawha was still on the jetty, administered first aid. On Feb. 3, 1925, the Pescawha fig- ured in a thrilling rescue of the cap- tain and eight crew members of the lumber carrier Caoba in the face of a 50-mile gale near the mouth of the Columbia shortly after the revenue cutter Algonquin came alongside. The late Capt. Robert Pamphlet and his men aboard the Pescawha were arrested and the vessel, with its $200,000 cargo of liquor seized. Mother, Five Children Killed In Flint Blast FINT,, Feb. 28. -- () - Police and firemen. today were endeavoring to learn whether gasoline or kerosene poured on live coals caused an ex- plosion here Monday that cost the lives of Mrs. Mildred Hamilton, 21, and four 'of her five children. Six-year-old Ernest Hamilton, the only child who escaped without in- jury, told authorities he believed his mother had been building a fire. The boy stepped out of the house just be- fore the explosion. The father, William Hamilton, em- ployed at an automobile plant, col- lapsed when he learned of the tragedy. trgey Senator Norris Attacks Wall Street; New York Bank Heads Resign; Jean Harlow Ieare Associated Pred.,Photos i Associated press Photos I Charles E. Mitchell (left) resigned as chairman of the National City bank of New York and Hugh B. Baker (right) quit as president of the National City company, an affiliate of the Natioinal City bank. Both testified before the Senate stok market investigating committee. Sen. George W. Norris of Nebraska used this eight-foot chart to illustrate to the Senate his version of how interlocking directorates make .it pos lble for major banking houses in New York to "control" most corporations of the United States. Jean Harlow Bern was recently exonerated from any implication following the death of her husband, Paul Bern. At the coroner's the verdict was brought of death by suicide. yi '" \ "." ' .,,s,.K, ' . " h M - x..'w.t_ .'.ry,.4 L. h,. .'I < h.v' . s.'r~c: ^.: .f11:,;v.7"" ;.> '"''' I .-:}> . .... . 'I ; C