The Weather pp, Altiga Slightly cooler Sunday; rain probable. Iait Editorials Good Teachers, Famous Men, or Both?; Political Prophets Interpret The Digest Poll. VOL. XLIIL No. 19 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, OCT. 16, 1932 PRICE FIVE CENTS Hoover Calls em Charges Contemptible, Entirely False Brands Absolutely Untrue Opposition Reports On Economic Strain; Notes Administrative Record Says Stock Market Not Original Cause Headsinsull Probe Speech Climaxes Journey Through Four States; Hearers Estimated As More Than 100,000 CLEVELAND, Oct. 15.-(A)-Presi- dent Hoover asserted tonight, while a police-estimated throng of 40,000 people listened, t h a t Democratic leaders had circulated "absolutely untrue" reports as to the origin of the nation's economic strain and had i s s u e d "contemptible statements" concerninjg his personal career. Given a two-minute ovation as he entered the auditorium - the same hall where Calvin Coolidge was nom- inated in 1924-the President time and again launched o u t in his lengthy address against statements he quoted from speeches by "the Democratic candidate." He asserted that the Democratic nominee had sought wrongly to give the impression that the stock market crash was "the prime cause of this disaster." Upholds Hawley-Smoot Tariff He characterized as "amazing state- ments" quotations from "the Demo- cratic candidate" that the Smoot- Hawley tariff was "one of the most important factors in the present world-wide depression." Interrupted time and again by ap- plause, the chief executive's speech came as the climax of a day in which he spoke from the rear platform of his special train as it crossed four states to throngs estimated by police to total more than 100,000. The President's audience tonight was divided into four parts, three of the sections listening through loud speakers in other section of the audi- torium and outside. He was intro- duced by David S. Ingalls, Ohio Re- publican gubernatorial nominee. 1 Mr. Hoover turned to what he called an accounting of his adminis- tration on wage and employment; questions. The President outlined in detail4 the following 12 measures and poli- cies as the record of his administra-1 tion in relation to wage and salary earners. Points to Record 1. Mobilization of national and lo-3 cal relief agencies; appropriation of $300,000,000 for loans to states; andy distribution of farm board wheat and cotton. 2. Calling on a conference of em- ployers and labor to uphold wages1 and buying power "until the cost ofJ living had diminished." 3. Use of public works to assist in the stablization of employment which by the end of th* year, he said, will total $2,400,000,000. 4. Appropriation of $1,500,000,000 for construction of public and pri- vate works of a reproductive charac- ter which he asserted had already resulted in starting works the ulti- mate cost of which will be $400,- 000,000. ; 5. Application of shorter hours to the government service to spread em- ployment.] Mentions Home Loan Banks 6. Creation of a system of home loan banks, the anticipation of whichm he said has "largely stopped forecls- ing on homes." 7. Advocacy of high wages as "the economic basis for the country." 8. Protection of t h e AmericanN market for American labor by thet maintenance ot a protective tariff,. 9. Prohibition by executive orderc of all immigration except relatives of1 American residents.I Recalls Guaranteed Dollar e 10. Preservation of the integrity of1 the American dollar, "in order thatI we might protect the working peopleI of the United States." 11. Restoration of normal jobs through the maintenance of credit.c 12. Efforts to improve AmericanI markets by improving the internalI stability of other nations and freeing (Associated Press Photo) Senator Peter Norbeck, chairman of the senate banking committee, will take charge of the senate's in- vestigation into the Insull case. Effinger Named Head Of State Rhodes Awards Michigan State Committee Is To Meet Dec. 12 To Make Selections Dean John R. Effinger has again been reappointed chairman of the Michian S t a t e Committee on Rhodes :cholarships, which will meet on Dec. l3 to make its selections. The Rhodes Scholarships provide in the first instance for two years at Oxford University, although they may be retained for a third year. The elections are based on excellence in scholarship and participation in ex- tra-curricular activity. "It should be clearly understood," said Dean Effinger, "that the chair- man of the commission recommend- ing candidates from the University is Prof. Arthur L. Cross of the history department. The recommendations of the local committee, together with those from other local committees all over the state, will be sent to the state committee, which will meet on Dec. 12 to make its selections. These will then be sent to the district com- mittee for the final elemination." Each of the six states in the dis- trict sends two candidates, and four of these are selected for scholarships. Any number of these may be selected from a given state, according to Dean Effinger. Last year two of the four district selections, George Tilley, '33L, and Samuel H. Beer, '32, were from the University; Dean Effinger con- siders this a remarkable record. For a furtherance of unity and ef- ficiency in the district committees, a modification has been made this year, providing that the three com- mitteemen shall each have served on at least two of the state committees. M. E. A. Closes Final Session Of Conference Final Meetings Devoted To Rural Schools, Man- ual Arts, And Sciences The sixth district of the Michigan Education Association ended i t s seventy-ninth annual conference here with section meetings yesterday morning. Thefinal session was devoted to section meetings divided according to fields of specialization. The sections meeting yesterday were: commercial, compulsory educa- tion, deans of girls, early and later elementary, elementary school prin- cipals, English, general science, handwriting, home economics, li- brary, manual arts and industrial education, mathematics, m o d e r n languages, music, physical education,' physics and chemistry, rural, small high schools, social science, and speech. Delegates met here Friday and opened the session with speeches by Dr. David Friday and Otto W. Hais- ley. The session was continued in the afternoon by division meetings in Prof. Brumm To Speak At Wesley Hall Del Toro Will Head Group In 'T'alk On Christianity At 9:30 This Morning Varied Programs Planned For Today Student Groups Will Meet At Ann Arbor Churches; Rabbi Heller 'To Speak Two prominent faculty men, Prof. J. L. Brumm of the Journalism de- partment and Prof. Julio Del Toro of the Romance Languages department will speak to student groups at Wes- ley Hall -today. Professor Brumm will address a gathering at 6:30 p. m. on the subject "Standards of Valije," while Professor Del Toro will lead the freshman group in a discussion of "European and American Christi- anity" at 9:30 a. m. Dr. E. W. Blakeman, director of Wesley Hall, will lead a graduate for- um at 6:30 p. m. on "Religion and Culture." To Give Sukkoth Message "Mansions and Tents," a Sukkoth message, will be delivered by Rabbi Bernard Heller, director of the Hillel Foundation, at the Women's League Chapel. His talk will begin at 11:00 a. m. Dr. Frederick B. Fisher, minister of the First Methodist Episcopal Church will preach at two services today. The first, to begin at 10:45 a. in., will concern "Falling in Love With Life," while the second, "Versailles," is scheduled for 7:45 p. m. Student classes will be held at the First Presybterian Church House, 1432 Washtenaw Ave., at 9:30 a. m. today. Further activities for, the col- lege student will be conducted at 5:30 and 6:30 p. m. when the Social Hour and Young People's Meeting are to be held. Robert I. Shaw will speak at the latter on the subject, "For Two Years I Live." Sayles to Preach R. Edward Sayles, minister of the First Baptist Church, will preach at 10:45 a. m. on "The Responsibility of Hearing." Howard R. Chapman, min- ister for students, will give two ad- dresses later in the day, the first at 12 noon on the subject "Religion and the Moral Life," the second at 6:00 p. m. on "Roger Williams, Pioneer of Liberty." Refreshments will be served after the supper hour talk. At St. Paul's Lutheran Church (Missouri Synod) C. A. Brauer, pas- tor, will conduct morning worship at 10:45 a. in., the text to be "Precious Saviour, Still Our Refuge." A stu- dent hike, with lunch provided, is to be held at 3:00 p. m. Rabbi Bernard Heller will address the members of the Student Fellow- ship of the Congregational Church at 6:30 on the subject, "Jesus, the Jew." The lecture and a half hour of classi- cal and semi-classical music by the Fellowship orchestra, under the di- rection of J. Christian Pfohl, will be preceded by a dinner. A service with sermon by E. C. Stellhorn, pastor of the Zion Luth- eran Church, is to be delivered at the church at 10:30 a. m. His subject will be "The Christian Doctrine of Giving." Two students programs, the first a supper at 5:30 p. in., the sec- ond a discussion at 6:30 p. mn. on "What to Believe About the Bible," are also listed. To Give Student Supper The Bethlehem Evangelical Church (Evangelical Synod) will hold a morning sermon at which Theodore Schmale, pastor, will discuss "The Joy of Discovery." A student club supper will be given at 5:30 p. m. with Prof. Phillip Schenk the speak- er. There will be a Young People's League meeting at 7:30 p. m. The addresses of t h e several churches are as follows: Wesley Hall, State St., between Washington and Huron; Hillel Foundation, corner of East University Ave. and Oakland A v e.; First Methodist Episcopal Church, corner of State and Wash- ington Sts.; First Baptist Church, East Huron, west of State St.; First Presbyterian Church, corner of Hur- on and Division Sts.; St. Paul's Luth- eran Church, corner of Third Ave. and West Liberty St.; Zion Lutheran Church, Washington St. at Fifth Ave.; Bethlehem Evangelical Church, South Fourth Ave. Bonus Bloc Powerful Minority in Campaign WASHINGTON, Oct. 15.--(R)-The pitching of the bonus issue into the middle of the seething political pot has sharpened interest in the so-call- ed "ex-soldier vote" as a factor in Presidential and Congressional races." It constitutes numerically a com- paratively small fraction of the total voting strength of the Nation and is smaller than such groups as the "farm vote" and the "labor vote." Political observers nevertheless con- sider it a very sizable unit-its power demonstrated in obtaining veterans' compensation in the face of formid- able opposition. The Veterans' Bureau estimates that on Jan. 1, 1932, there were 4,- 277,000 living American veterans of the World War. That is only 6 per cent of a potential voting population in the United States, including men and women, of 67,290,000 as figured by the Census Bureau. Representatives of veterans' or- ganizations point out, however, that the full voting strength of the ex- soldier is probably considerably greater, due to the influence on mem- bers of their families, not to mention distant relatives and friends. They contend that a more accu- rate picture of the ratio is obtained by comparing some four million, or at least three million, veterans' fam- ilies with the total of 29,900,000 fam- ilies in the United States. Police Arrest 9 Detroit Men In Radio Theft Men Transferred Radios From Speeding Truck To Aides In Automobiles' Sheriff's officers yesterday arrested nine Detroiters for the theft of 24. radios from a truck going between here and Ypsilanti on the night of Oct. 7. The bandits had two automobiles. One of-theni came up behind a truck carrying International radios from Ann Arbor to Chicago and two men got out, climbed over the fender to the front bumper of their car and from there to the truck. They then threw off 12 cases of radios contain- ing two radios each. The occupants of the second car collected the cases, sheriff's officers said. The men arrested are all from De- troit. They are: Joseph Chmielew- ski, 19, Norman Siwak, 18, Eddie Wardzinski, 17, Mike Kuzenko, 17, Tony Maciak, 15, Zigmund Warsyn- ski, 17, Roger Shelton, 28, William Mulawa,17, and Edmund Spieg, 18 Chmielewski and Siwak, accused of complicity,in the theft demanded an examination which was set for Oct., 19. All the others waived examina- tion and were bound over to circuit court. Sheriff's Officers Clyde Bennett, William Dailey, George Randall, and Richard Klavitter worked on the case, Friday and Saturday and effected the arrests yesterday. They also re- covered five of the radios and expect to obtain more soon. Passes To Regeczi Account For Scores Brown Asserts Repeal Unlikely In Radio Talk Slowness of Legislation Hinders Definite Action, Professor Believes Prohibition is with us to stay for at least the next few years, is the belief of Prof. Everett S. Brown of the Political Science department, who spoke last night on the University broadcasting program over station WJR, Detroit. "In the first place," said Professor Brown, "a long debate in Congress is probable. Then it must be re- membered that the Congress which convenes this December is the Con- gress elected two years ago. The members elected next November will not take office until March 4, 1933. "Again," continued Professor Brown, "the state legislatures will all meet in January 1933. If no amendment is ready for them then they will de- lay action until they meet again." Asked if the Congress could legal- ize light wines and beer, Professor Brown stated that by revising the Volstead Act it would be possible to make legal light alcohol drinks, but that the fight over the exact defini- tion of the word "intoxicating" would probably be carried to the Supreme Court. Koo, Chinese Speaker, Will Address S.C.A. Engineer And Diplomat To Be Present At Second Open Forum Monday Dr. T. Z. Koo, prominent Chinese engineer and diplomat, will be pre- sented in the second Student Christ- ian Association open forum, Monday, Oct. 17. Dr. Koo was graduated from St. John's University, Shanghai. For nine years he has served on the administrative board of the Chinese Railway Service and has served on the board of the Second Opium Conference called by the League of Nations. He is a promi- nent lecturer in English University circles and has been greeted with favor in his present series of Ameri- can lectures, according to dispatches from the National Council sponsor- ing his appearance here. Dr. Koo will speak in the after- noon lecture on practical christian- ity and devote the evening to a com- prehensive discussion of the Man- churian situation as it effects China and Japan. While here he will be entertained by the Cosmopolitan Club. GAELIC DYING IN SCOTLAND BANFF, Scotland, Oct. 15.-.')- Gaelic seems dying in this Scottish county. Only 159 persons know the old tongue now, according to a re- cent census compared with 258 in 1921. Star Quarterback Harry Newman's Accurate Heaves Render Buckeyes }}Helpless; Michigan Line Is Invincible In Crises Wolverines Score d In OpeningMinutes Scarlet And Gray Make First Downs With Ease As Regulars Are Out; GameWon In First Half HARRY NEWMAN Two Passes LINEUPS Michigan Downs Ohio, 14-0; Williamson And MICHIGAN Petoskey .... Wistert ..... Marcovsky Bernard .... Cantrill .... Damm ...... Williamson Newman ..... Everhardus OHIO STATE ... LE ........ Ferrall .. LT. .....Monahan ... LG........ Varner ... C .......R. Smith ...RG. ....... Gailus ...RT...... Rosequist ...RE....... Gillman ... Q I....... Cramer ..LH. ..... Hichman Fay ..........R H.......Carroll Regeczi ........ F.... Vuchinich Scoring: Michigan .......7 7 0 0-14 Ohio State .... 0 0 0 0- 0 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Michigan 14, Ohio State 0. Pittsburgh 18, Army 13. Brown 7; Yale 2. Pennsylvania 14, Dartmouth 7. Indiana 12, Iowa 0. Minnesota 7, Nebraska 6. Carnegie Tech 6, W. & J. 6. Ohio Univ. 14, Navy 0.: Harvard 46, Penn State 13. Northwestern 26, Illinois 0. Purdue 7, Wisconsin 6. Chicago 20, Knox 0. Notre Dame 62, Drake 0. Michigan State 27, Illinois Wes- leyan 0. Valparaiso 27, Detroit C. C. 0. Hillsdale 20, Kalamazoo 0. Holy Cross 9, Detroit 7. Columbia 22, Virginia 6. Kansas 26, Iowa State 0. Rutgers 32, Delaware 0. Colgate 28, Cook 6. Southern Methodist 16, Syracuse 6. Princeton d, Cornell 0. Georgia 6, N. Caro. 6. By JOHN W. THOMAS COLUMBUS, O., Oct. 15-Helpless, against Harry Newman's accurate passing, Ohio State bowed to the mighty Wolverines, 14-0, here this afternoon before 40,000 spectators. Although the Buckeyes worked the ball from midfield to the 20-yard line on several long power drivves, Michigan's line kept them at bay when the goalposts were in sight. Michigan showed little regard for Ohio's highly touted running attack and used a long list of reserves, some of whom played for an entire half. With the Wolverine regulars on the bench, the Scarlet and Gray team piled up first downs, but to most of the fans, the game was won at the end of the first half. Michigan Scores Early Michigan scored in the first two minutes of play, after kickingroff to Ohio State. Cramer fumbled on the third down and recovered, losing five yards. On the next play Cramer kicked 14 yards to his 29-yard line and then Everhardus was stopped at the line of scrimmage. A pass, Newman to Fay, made only two yards, but another from Newman to Everhardus made 15. Fay was stop- ped on the line on the first down and repeated the play for nine yards. On the third down Fay lost six as the line gave way to Ohio forwards, and Newman elected to pass on fourth down. John Regeczi slipped over the line of scrimmage, gathered in the pass, and swept over the goal line untouched by an Ohio back. New- man kicked the extra point. It was Michigan's third pass of the day. The Ohio backfield could not decipher the pass formations, and after only two minutes of play it was evident that Michigan could score at will on this kind of offense. Throughout the first half, during which most of the Michigan regulars were in the game, the ball was in Oh i o Territory. This was due to a long pass after the second kick-off .' that brought the ball to the 26-yard line. Regeczi hurled the ball to Petoskey for the 31-yard gain. From this point on 86EV4W t h r o u ghout the first two periods. Michigan was not in danger, while Ohio was threatened. Make Second Touchdown Cramer made an opening for the second touchdown when he ran on the fourth down after he himself had called the play a punt. Regeczi had also done this on one occasion, im- mediately before Cramer's boner. Newman took the ball on the first play and made 16 yards around end. Michigan received 15 more as a gift as Ohio was penalized for holding. Newman shot one of the two incom- plete Michigan passes of the after- noon to Petoskey and then sent Fay into the line for five yards to draw in the Buckeye backs. Williamson made a touchdown by taking the ball from Newman in the clear and cross- ing the line, a gain of 22 yards. After this pass, the Wolverines used but one more pass all afternoon. New-. man again made the extra point. STATISTICS Michigan Ohio First Downs.... ......7 8 by rushing........ ..2 6 by passing........ ..4 1 by penalties........ 1 1 Yards gained by rushing ..........76 172 Yards lost by rushing. 28 18 ,z _ . 1 « ,' Deadline For 'Ensian Senior Pictures Dec. 51 More than 50 seniors had applied for their 'Ensian picture coupons by yesterday noon, John A. Carstens, '33, business manager of the publica- tion said yesterday. The price of the coupons is $3.00, Carstens said, and they pay both for having the picture taken and having it placed in the 'Ensian. The dead- line for having the pictures taken is December 5. Reservations must be made by all seniors with one of the official 'En- sian photographers as soon as they have purchased their picture cou- pons. These are Rentschler, Dey, and Spedding. The price of the yearbook is still $4.00, $3.50 with a $1.00 coupon which can be purchased for 50 cents. The cost of the book will be raised to $5.00 early in December. Student Injured In Auto Accident Last N i g h t Weni Liao, Grad., 22 years old, was seriously injured at 10:30 p. m. yesterday while driving on S. Main St./ He was taken to the University Hospital with a frac- tured skull. It was learned at the Hospital Band Displays New Formations At Michigan-Ohio State Game By W. STODDARD WHITE O. S. U. STADIUM, COLUMBUS, O., Oct. 15.-(Special)-Some of the most complex maneuvers ever enter- ed into by the University of Michi- gan's 105-piece Varsity Band were performed today before the crowd of' 50,000 persons who witnessed the1 Ohio State-Michigan football game this afternoon. Probably the most effective single formation was the word "OHIO," spelled out in script diagonally across. the field in the double-deck Ohio stadium, to the accompaniment of the O. S. U. marching song, "Fight the Team." Other Michigan band end of the giant concrete horseshoe. Mr,. Falcone also directed the playing of "The Star-Spangled Banner" by both bands before the game. Both Play "Victors" At 1:30 p. m. the "Fighting Hun- dred" took the field in advance of the Ohio State band, marched from the horseshoe-end tunnel to the cen- ter of the field, halted, spread its files, and awaited the Ohio band, which interlocked with it. Both bands then stepped off playing "The Victors." At the goal line they halt- ed to play the national anthem, un- der Mr. Falcone's direction. At the signal of the Ohio State