Weather ,1 QL g itlga Cloudy skies predicted with light rain possible. A6F All } Editorials Ni ' on Finds ,_w n ,m Footbal Or VOL. XLIII No. 55 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, NOV. 29, 1932 PRC , aP ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, NOV. 29. 1932 A-' V SYAC. tAC.A~ r r b 3 f. M Y a r-. i Hanley Picks Newman For Shrine Game Coach Asks Quarterback To Play With Eastern Team For Charity Jan. 2 Williamson, Others May Receive Bids Seniors Not Engaged In Other Sports Are Only Gridders Who May Go CHICAGO, Nov. 28.---P)--Coach Dick Hanley of Northwestern, who will be associated with Coach Andy Kerr of Colgate in the preparation of the eastern team in the annual East- West Shrine hospital charity game at San Francisco, Jan. 2, today an- nounced the names of 12 players who will receive invitations. Harry Newman of Michigan is Hanley's choice for quarterback. The others and their prospective squad positions are: ends, Paul Moss, Pur- due, and Dick Fencl, Northwestern; tackles, Joe Kurth, Notre Dame, and 'Marshall Wells, Minnesota; guards, Jim Harris, Notre Dame, Dick Smith, Ohio State, and Bob Gonya, North- western; center, John Oehler, Pur- due; halfbacks, Ernest Rentner, Northwestern, and Gil Berry, Illi- nois; fullback, Roy Horstmann, Pur- due. If they had not already come out for basketball or track Hanley said he would have chosen Ivan William- son, Michigan, and Brad Robinson, Minnesota, ends; Kabat, Wisconsin, guard; and Lew Hinchman, Ohio State, halfback. The rules permit only seniors who do not go in for some other sport after the football season, to be named. NEWMAN QUALIFIES CONSENT Harry Newman, Michigan's All- American quarterback, said last night that he was highly pleased with Coach Hanley's invitation but that his answer hinged upon the Rose Opponent For Trojans is YetT O Be Revealed LOS ANGELES, Calif., Nov. 28. -QP)-With the Rose Bowl tourney football committee -meeting tomor- row night to officially pick the University of Southern California as the west's representative in the annual Rose Bowl classic Jan. 2 the question of the Trojans' oppo- nent was no nearer a solution to- day. Michigan still stands as the fa- vorite to .get the game, if the Big Ten barrier against post-season games can be removed. Failing of this, Colgate or Pittsburgh prob- ably will get the call. Alabama Polytechnic's chances of playing the game are considered slight. Bowl game. If Michigan goes to the grid classic he will not be available of course, but if Michigan does not receive the invitation, or if the Big Ten refuses to allow the Wolverines to participate in the game, he will ac- cept the position of quarterbacking the East eleven. Dr. F isher To Address S.C.A. Forum Today . 'Can America Maintain Her Standard Of Living?' Is To Be His Subject "Can America Maintain Her Stand- ard of Living?" will be the subject of a Student Christian Association for- um to be conducted by Dr. Frederick B. Fisher, pastor of the ];Methodist Church, at 4:15 p. m. today in Na- tural Science Auditorium. The forum is one of the events on the program of a special confer- ence of Methodist ministers, profes- sors, and . student church leaders meeting today at Wesley Hall. Dele- gates will discuss possible changes in organization of student religious groups and present methods used in the relationship between church groups and colleges. The Rev. Edgar Blake, Bishop of Roosevelt Confers With His Advisers (Associated Press Photo) The three men shown with President-Elect Franklin D. Roosevelt are the closest advisers to the New York governor. Left to right: Prof. Raymond Moley of Columbia University, noted economist and barrister; James A. Farley, director of the recent campaign; Mr. Roosevelt; and Louis McHenry Howe, the "man behind the throne." Non-Profit Book Store May Be Opened, Here Quraishi And Committee Of Graduates Will Sell University Texts At Cost Plans were under- way here last night to establish a non-profit co- operative book store for the benefit of students and faculty members, it was learned from Sher M. Quraishi, who heads the committee of gradu- ate students backing the project. The opening has been set for Feb. 1. All text books of the literary and engineering colleges will be available. as well as second semester books in the architectural, forestry, medical and. law divisions of the University. Books will be for sale at cost. A membership deposit of $2 will be required. The deposit may be taken out in goods during the semes- ter or in cash at the end of the semester, its purpose being to proide capital for the enterprise. Report 400 Tickets Sold For Art Cinema Movie More than 400 tickets have already been sold for "Ten Days that Shook the World," the first motion picture on the program of the new Art Cinema League, which will be shown in Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre Dec. 1 and 2, the secretary of the execu- tive board said last night. According to Valentine B. Windt, director of dramatics and member of the board, it is "an unusually good advance sale, and should insure the success of the first project of the league." While in Russia, Sinclair Lewis, the author, saw "Ten Days That Shook the World" and said of its' producer: "In Moscow I saw several pictures directed by Eisenstein and was wierdly impressed. I think that Eisenstein is one of the greatest di- rectors in the world. His work re- minds me of the heroic screen effects of Griffith. The difference is in the ideas which inspire their work. It would give very interesting results if the directors' mind of Eisenstein could be combined with American technique. We follow with interest the growth of their young cinematic art." Ypsilanti Police Push Murder Investigation YPSILANTI, Nov. 28.-(/P)-Work- ing on the theory that the body of Cap Deothridge, found here Saturday, was placed in the Negro section of Ypsilanti to throw suspicion on the Negro residents, police t o n i g h t searched the rural districts where the slain man lived. Four suspects were questioned last night but nothing of importance was learned. MUST TAKE 'ENSIAN PICTURES Because of the necessity of set- ting up forms, senior picture stubs must be bought and the pictures taken for the 'Ensian before Dec. 5, it was announced last night by .Tnhn A_ Carstn. , 3.abinss Haldane Lists Toxic Effects Of Impure Air It's Important Factor In Our Mortality Problem, English Scientist Says Declaring that the main thing that kills men while at work is what they breathe, Dr. John B. S. Haldane, di- rector of the John Innes Horticul- tural Institute of Genetics at Cam- bridge, England, last night went on to give the latest information on "Bad Air," where one is likely to en- counter it, how one may detect if, and what measures are praticable to combat it in various.occupations. Problems of bad air are of three general types, Dr. Haldane explaied, those arising from too much or too little air, from a wrong composition of the atmosphere; and from the presence of harmful dusts and bac- teria in the air. An occupation which has to fight the problem of too much air is that of diving, where men are forced to work with compressed air and are in danger, on the one hand, from bubbles of nitrogen in the body tissues and on the other, from posion by oxygen. . Dr. Haldane pointed out that a great deal of study still needs to be done in this occupation to determine with accuracy just how slowly or how rapidly to make the ascent from un- der water. Announce Sale Of Tickets For Student Satire Business Manager Says Advance Reservations Are Unusually Heavy Advance reservations for "The Beggar on Horseback," a satire on prosperity by George S. Kaufman and Marc Connelley which Play Pro- duction will present Dec. 5 to 10 in the Laboratory Theatre, are being received now, Charles Harrell, 34, business manager, announced yester- day. I "Because of the tremendous popu- larity of the play," Harrell said, "the advance orders for the production have been unusually heavy and from all indications sellouts for a majority of the six nights which the play runs will occur. "The regular box-office sale of tickets will begin at 10 a. m. Wednes- day and will continue until 8 p. m. every day until the closing perform- ance," he stated. Work on the show, which is being produced for the third time by the organization, has been progressing rapidly under the direction of Val- entine B. Windt. Rehearsals have been held for the past two weeks and will continue through next Sun- day with a cast of over 40 students. Five-Year-Old Is Injured When Strnek Bv ehiele Backgrounds Of Acoustical Society Given Dr. Miller Colors Talk With Reminiscences Of His Contacts In Sound Study Neglected In History, He Claims Thorough-Going Research In This Field Conducted Only Since World War Dr. Dayton C. Miller, of the Case School of Applied Science, Cleveland, sketched the history of the science of sound last night before the Acous- tical Society of America, holding its eighth meeting here. Dr. Miller color- ed his talk with anecdotes, some of them arising from personal contacts with eminent physicists, and with slides, rare books, flutes, a mono- chord, and tuning forks. In gathering material for his lec- ture, Dr. Miller found, he said, that the sience of applied sound has been neglected in histories of science, only a few pages or lines being biven to it in volumes of 500 or more pages. Two books which he owns, however, con-t tain "more references than all the1 visible stars in the heavens," and from these he organized his research. Possibly Recent Only since the World war has thor-, ough study of sound been carried on, Dr. Miller said. During the time of ancient Greece and Rome and through the Middle Ages, even into, the seventeenth century, scientists had, mystic ideas about music and sound. and tried to link them with their conceptions of the universe. Even such a well-known scientist as Newton, Dr. Miller pointed out, ac-+ tually believed that there was some connection between the eight musical - notes and the seven colors. "His work in attempting to justify his original+ calculation of 987 feet per second as the velocity of sound by blaming it onr conditions of the air was character- istic of sophomore lab work of the present day," Dr. Miller stated. The society will conclude its meet-1 ings here today. At the morning+ meeting, starting at 9:30 a. i.. six papers will be presented. Members will gather at Hill Auditorium at+ 1:30 p. in. to hear Palmer Christian give a short organ recital, demon- strating the acoustics of the hall. Open house will be held in the East Physics Building during the rest of the afternoon. Technical Papers Read Meetings yesterday were given overj entirely to the reading of technicalj papers. The first of these, by John . S. Parkinson and Paul o. Young, of1 the Johns-Manville Corporation, de- scribed briefly experiments made in1 connection with that firm's acous- tical laboratory. Measurement of transmission loss+ through partition walls specially con-1 structed in Bell Telephone Labora- tories was explained in a paper by E. H. Bedell and K. D. Swartzel, Jr.,] of the Bell staff. V. L. Chrisler and Catherine E. Miller pointed out that1 the installation of rotating vanes in] the reverberation room of the Bureau of Standards keeps sound more uni- formly distributed and causes the change in the apparent coefficient with the size and shape of the sample to be much smaller than be- fore. Discuss Absorption Coefficients In a paper by S. K. Wolf and W. J. Sette, of Electrical Research Prod- ucts, Inc., measured absorption coef- ficients were shown to depend on both position and quality of material. Lloyd Loar, of the Vivi-Tone Com- pany, concluded the morning session by demonstrating with musical in- struments the possibilities of elec- trically produced tones from string vibration. Supersonics was the general topic of discussion in the afternoon. J. C. Hubbard, of Johns Hopkins Univer- sity, opened the session with a dis- cussion of the methods and results of supersonic interferometry. He was followed by W. T. Richards, of Princeton University, who talked on the chemical aspects of the disper- sion and absorption of sound. Absorption measurements in gas can be determined by use of the theory of the supersonic interfero- Report Ford Well On Way To Recovery His Condition Improved So Much That Issuance Of Bulletins Is Curtailed Auto Magnate Reads Accounts Of Illness President Hoover, King George V, Mussolini And Others Send Inquiries DETROIT, Nov. 28.-- )-Henry Ford's condition tonight was reported by his physicians to be so satisfactory that no further bulletins will be is- sued until 10 a. m. tomorrow. The latest bulletin, marking an- other step in the 69-year-old auto-' mobile magnate's steady recovery from the major operation he under- went Saturday, revealed that his temperature was normal. The bulletin was timed at 6:30 p. m. but was is- sued at 7:05 p. m. and said: "Mr. Ford's condition remains very satisfactory. Temperature 98.6, pulse 84, respiration 20." The bulletin was signed by Dr. Roy D. McClure, chief surgeon of Henry Ford hospital and Dr. Frank J. Slad- en. Dr. McClure performed the opera- tion for femoral hernia. From unofficial sources it was learned that Mr. Ford laughed and joked with members of his family to-1 day and read with interest the news- paper accounts of his illness. It was' reported that the Ford family no longer feels anxiety for Mr. Ford's condition and that his improvement has been so encouraging that Mrs. Ford has gone forward with plans for a meeting at the Ford home next Tuesday which she had arranged last week. It was said that there was every indication that Mr. Ford had passed the "crisis" which physicians' awaited. That the concern for Mr. Ford's re- covery is world-wide was proved by the flood of messages. No list was made public of prominent well wish- ers, but a person close to the family ::aid that messages had been received from President Hoover, George V, ing of England, Mussolini and many others. Recuperates Rapidly l j Word That Dems Lead In Senate After Robinson Shoul Corn :;'' lttiK :':': titi: i v+'" :;:;:ti { :v f, r. P.,,~ HENRY FORD Watkins Kipke Will Speak At Union Smoker William'son, Fay Are Also On Program; Lederle To Act As Toastmaster A former Varsity fullback who has been a Rhodes Scholar and is now the police commissioner of Detroit will be one of the principal speakers on the program of the Union football smoker to be held Wednesday night in the assembly hall of the Union. He is James K. Watkins, '09. In addition to Mr. Watkins' address, short speeches will be given at the affair by Fielding H. Yost, director of* Sewer I - 1 Dems Believe Senate Lead Is Possibility Extension Would Give Work To City's Jobless Plans to put approximately 200 un- employed men of Ann Arbor to work for from two to three months during the coming winter may depend upon bids received by the finance commit- tee of the Common Council before 10 a. m. Saturday. The money will be used for the building of a sewer line which now ends about 1,000 feet east of the University Hospital, but which, if the bids are received, will be extended about 6,000 feet east be- fore draining into the Huron river. The primary purpose of the pro- posal is, in the words of a resolution adopted by the Common Council Nov. 7, "for furnishing relief to the poor and needy inhabitants of Ann Arbor," and at the same time ac- complishing a needed public im- provement. intercollegiate athletics, Harry G. Kipke, Varsity football coach, Ivan Williamson, '33, football captain, and Stanley Fay, '34, captain-elect of the football team. The speakers will be introduced by John W. Lederle, '39, president of the Union. The Varsity Band in action, both last year's and this year's Michigar .otball teams in crucial plays, arc 'enez from the Olympic Games wil * e Ehown to the crowd at the smoke: in the form of sound pictures taken on the scene of action by professional photographers. Campus sales of tickets for the Union Football Smoker will be carried on today and tomorrow from 8 a. m. to 3 p. m., it was announced yesterday by John Lederle, Union president. Admission to the smoker is set at 25 cents per ticket and the sale of tickets has been limited to 1,000. Cider, doughnuts and cigarettes will be distributed to all who attend the meeting, which will begin at 8 p. M. tomorrow. Stewart Hansen Elected President Of '35L Class Stewart M. Hansen was elected president of the freshman law class yesterday, it was announced last night by Joseph Zias, president of the Student Council. Other officers elected were Earl V. Rupp, vice president; Kenneth L. Yourd, secretary; and Paul O. Boesel, treasurer. I Roosevelt Stresses Legalizing Of Beer President-Elect Covers All Work To Be Done' At Congressional S e ssio n WARM SPRINGS, Ga., Nov. 28.- (P)-During. a series of conferences, Franklin D. Roosevelt today went over with the leader of his party in the Senate the plans by which he hopes the short session can make sufficient progress with the Demo- cratic program to avoid an extra meeting early in his administration. After his meeting with Sen. Robin- son of Arkansas there came word that the Democrats expected virtual- ly to control the Senate in the short session, that unofficial committees would be set up to deal with several important subjects, and that execu- tive appointments ould be laid aside by the Senate until after inaugura- tion. Among the measures on which par- ticular stress was laid in the talk be- tween the two were the prospects for enactment of farm relief' and beer legalizing measures at the short ses- sion. The beer measure would go hand in hand with steps to balance the budget. Considers Question To this question, Mr. Roosevelt was giving serious thought. During a press conference late today at the cottage, the President-Elect said he had found the budget the "most fas- cinating book I have read in years." Robinson, talking to newspaper- men just before he left to motor to Washington, said his conferences with Mr. Roosevelt had covered the whole scope of the work to be done at the approaching session. "It extended particularly to the possibility of enacting a farm meas- are and obtaining action on beer 4egislation," he said. The President-Elect had two long talks today with Henry M. Morgen- thau, of New York, and Henry A. Wallace, Iowa farm editor, on meth- ods to be employed in dealing with farm surplus. M. L. Wilson of the Montana State Agricultural College, .lay come later. Hoover, Aides Await Word From Europe WASHINGTON, Nov. 28.-(P)- Holding securely to the position that Europe has failed to produce facts which justify her request for post- ponement of war debt payments due next month, President Hoover and his advisors tonight awaited the ar- rival of additional notes from London and Paris. Secretary Mills and Secretary Stim- son talked the situation over with the chief executive today and afterward said no new decisions had been reached and America's remained un- altered. Like Opinions Expressed "We will know more in 48 hours," Mills said in reply to newspapermen's questions on what the debtor na- tions will do on Dec. 15. when the net installments fall due. "Right now we are standing squarely on the Pres- ident's position that no facts have been presented to warrant suspension of the Dec. 15 payments and that these payments should be made." Both cabinet members feel that the next move mnpst come from Eu- rope and that unless some unfore- seen facts are presented by the deb- tors the decision whether they will pay or default is squarely up to them. During the day, the President talk- ed with Walter E. Edge, ambassador to France, and John W. Garrett, am- bassador to Italy. Edge said he had called principally to say goodby be fore sailing for Paris and was "glad to have had the opportunity to gain a first-hand picture of the war debt situation on this side of the Atlan- tic." SUBSCRIBERS This represents the second notice given you who have not paid for your subscriptions. Please settle immediately and save us the trouble of billing you a second time. Wet Power In House May Face Test As GroupsThreatenTo Bolt WASHINGTON, Nov. 28.-(P)-A threatened bolt by groups in both parties may put the potency of House wet strength to a rigorous test next Monday in the vote planned then onc the Democratic outright repeal of the Eighteenth Amendment. Grumblings were heard in various quarters today on Capitol Hill over the form of the resolution made pub- lic by its sponsor, Speaker Garner, calling for flat repeal and ratifica- tion through state conventions, Several Southern Democrats said they preferred to vote on a resolution similar to the Glass Amendment in the Senate providing for outlawing the saloon and Federal protection to dry states. Senator Norris, Nebraska Repub- lican and chairman of the Senate Ju- diciary Committee, said he was op- He submitted it to Chairman Sum- ners, of the House Judiciary Com- mittee. Sumners, a fellow Texan, imme- diately voiced disapproval of the state convention provision. The legisla- tures, he said, could act more expedi- tiously, although the Congress has authority to set up the entire ma- chinery for state conventions to act on a Federal matter. Here is the text of Garner's resolu- tion: "The Eighteenth Article of amend- ment is hereby repealed. "This Article shall be inoperative unless it shall have been ratified as an amendment to the Constitution by three-fourths of the several states within seven years from the date of its submission to the states by the Congress."