The Weather Generally fair Wednesday; Thursday increasing cloudiness and slightly warmer. Y fr igan tt Editorials Roosevelt Opposed From Left, Not Right. . VOL. XLIV No. 27 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1933 PRICE B I I I 0 PRICE RFC Will Buy First Bullion Dorothy Sands' Impersonations Are Well Received In Detroit I ! OrderToday Jones, Morgenthau Are To Assist In Fixing Amount And Price Purchases Will Be Made By Treasury Upward Trend In Wheat Is Noted As Reaction To Roosevelt's Plan WASHINGTON, Oct. 24.-(J)-The Reconstruction Finance Corporation will make its first purchase of gold at a fixed price tomorrow and offi- cially set in motion the economic mechanism by which President Roosevelt hopes to achieve a man- aged currency and higher prices. Jesse Jones, chairman of the cor- poration and Henry Morgantheau, Jr., acting as spokesman for Presi- dent Roosevelt, will call at the treas- ury at 9:30 a. m. and with Acting Secretary Dean Acheson decide how much newly-mined gold is to be bought and what price is to be paid for it. Through the regular facilities of the treasury and Federal Reserve System, they will be supplied with gold quotations from London, Paris, and other foreign centers. The price they agree on is to be slightly higher thanthe foreign figures. They"prom- ised an announcement by 10 a. m. Roosevelt Kept In By Cold With President Roosevelt confined to the White House by a cold, officials' of the agencies involved were busy today making preparations for the transaction. Numerous details had to1 be arranged and a system devised for z assaying, delivering and storing gold.I The Recovery Council'composed of key men in the administration's re- construction and relief program, alsot held its usual meeting, despite the President's absence. Secretary oft State Cordell Hull, presiding.f Mr." Roosevelt was described by . White House attaches as being onlyf slightly indisposed, and it was said that he probably would return to hist Reaping the highest praise from critics wherever she appears, Doro- thy Sands, impersonator of stage and screen stars, who will appear Wed- nesday, Nov. 1, in Hill Auditorium, was enthusiastically received when she appeared at the Wilson Theater in Detroit recentlyhto openthe Town Hall series. "Miss Sands rocked us with mirth as she caricatured wicked ladies of great influence from Delilah to Mata Har," declared Ralph Holmes, De- troit Times critic. "Even the wo- men of the audience laughed."' Mr. Holmes called Miss Sands a "rare artist," ranking her with Ruth Draper and Cornelia Otis Skinner. "She has perhaps even a slight ad- vantage over them in being able to sing most charmingly," he added. "Miss Sands can hardly fail to face ever larger audiences on each suc- cessive return to any community." Appearing in the triple role of cre- ative artist, interpretative artist, and historian, Miss Sands presented her own one-woman review of the Ameri- can theater, "Our Stage and Stars," the same performance which she will give here. "It was a great parade, and fas- cinating not only because of the ac- curacy of the impersonations them- selves but also for the sharp contrast it afforded between the styles of the past and the present in stage mate- rial," Mr. Holmes said. "'The Picture That's Turned to the Wall' leaves us limp with laugh- ter today, almost unable to belive that such unforgiving righteousness on the part of the father of a 'wronged' girl ever could have been so commonly accepted as it was by an audience at Tony Pastor's," he said. From the opening scene Miss Sands' performance was loudly ap- plauded, Mr. Holmes said, but when she made her final exit, leering over her shoulder with Mae West's clas- sical invitation, "Wynchcmupnseme- sometime?" the audience fairly howled. No opening number of an Oratori- cal Association series in recent years has aroused such wide-spread inter- est, Carl G. Brandt, business man- ager of the association, said yester- day. He reported a heavy demand for tickets, but said that good seats are still available. Government Of France Is Reorganized Sidetracking Of Socialists And A Strong Coalition Government Is Urged Daladier's Return, Thought Unlikely Chamber Of Deputies Give 'No Confidence' Vote To Premier On Budget _i 30 Passengers Dead In Wreck Of Paris Train' Engine And Four Coaches Leave Tracks Rounding Sharp Curve EYREUX, France, Oct. 24.-(A)- Thirty persons are known to be dead and 36 injured in the wreck of the Paris-Cherbourg Express train today near Saint Elier, nine miles from here. At least 12 of the dead were wom- en. No American names appeared on the casualty list. The express was rounding a sharp turn at the time of the accident. The engine and four coaches hurtled from the tracks off, a thirty-three foot viaduct into the Rouloir River. The fireman and engineer died in their cab. The derailed coaches were crushed on the river bed. Many of the deaths were caused by drowning. The death list mounted rapidly through the day as many of those most seriously injured died in hos- pitals. Senator Pierrer-Adolphe Dudouyt, 72 years old, narrowly escaped drowning. He was pulled from the wreckage and carried to safety. Most ofathe victims were French. The train was the regular express which leaves Cherbourg early every morning. Ten bodies were removed from the wrecked coaches approximately si- multaneously in the ;early rescue work. The injured were removed to hospitals as fast as rescue facilities permitted. The President went ahead with his work in his White House study, how- ever, devoting considerable time to, the details of the gold-buying agency. Grain Gains Lost Later Officials of the RFC, treasury, and Federal Reserve scanned reports of second-day market reactions to the President's plan, announced in his address of Sunday night. They were1 pleased to note an upward trend in wheat which carried quotations to the highest point of the current move- ment, even though the gain was erated later by profit taking. A steady cotton market also brought encour- agement. The dollar slid downward, but this brought no expressions of concern. In' fact, it has been intimated that one aim of Mr. Roosevelt's currency pro- gram is to encourage such a trend as a means of helping domestic prices. The stock exchange after puzzling for two days over the effect of the Roosevelt plan on the general eco- nomic structure decided late in the day that the move was inflationary in nature, and a strong rally ensued. As in the trading yesterday, gold stocks were particularly buoyant. As with virtually all of Mr. Roose- velt's recovery projects, the prime purpose of the gold-buying plan was to increase the prices of the things the farmer and manufacturer pro- duce to a level that would give them a profit and thereby increase busi- ness activity and, consequently em- I After 40,000 Flips Science Finds That You End Up Even ATHENS, Ga., Oct. 24.-(AP)- Penny-flipping odds are about even on heads and tails after 40,000 sci- entific flips, says Prof. Pope R. Hill, of the mathematics department of the University of Georgia, but his experiments have progressed only half way. Months ago the professor began his flipping. He assembled 200 pennies, a hundred of one date and a hundred of another. He balanced each penny against the other down to one-thou- sandth of a gram. Since they were weighed on chem- ical balances, Prof. Hill said that, in addition to the heads and tails falls, he would, get information on the probability of runs of certain num- bers as well- as to test the general law of probability. He expects to flip the pennies for the 100,000th time next July, and then his experiment will be com- pleted. Extra Session DFepends Upon New Rum Law Liquor Control Measure And Banking Legislation Would Be Enacted LANSING, Oct. 24.--(P)-Governor Comstock is awaiting only the com- pletion of a liquor control bill by the State Legislative Council before or- dering a special session of the Legis- lature, he said today. The governor declared the complete program he willsubmit to the extra session is about ready. Receipt of a telegram from Wash- ington tentatively accepting the pro- posal to enact a law giving the ad- ministrative board power to nego- tiate Federal loans for the $25,000,- 000 State building program, ended conjecture in that direction. The gov- ernor has made up his mind what' banking legislation is.needed. All that' is lacking is a liquor control neas- ure that will be workable after the Eighteenth Amendment is repealed. "There is no use in holding a spe- cial session for any one of these sub-' jects. I want to put them all to- gether," the governor said. Whether the extra session will be held early in November or around the first of December depends on de- velopments in connection with the liquor control- measure. A subcom- mittee of the legislative council is to meet here this week and hopes to reach agreement on a control draft by Friday or Saturday. Next week the council will convene to listen to the recommendations of the sub- committee. How long it will take the council to decide upon what sort of a, bill should be submitted no one was1 able to state. Mooring Of Graf Zeppelin Periled By Akron Wind AKRON, Ohio, Oct. 24.--()-A high wind tonight delayed the moor- ;,. ,f +i. r_. a 17,,,_ .,;,. .z_; ,_U .. , PARIS, Oct. 24.--()-A strong coalition, government like that of Raymond Poincare in 1926 and the sidetracking of Socialists for a new Center majority were urged on Pres- ident Albert Lebrun in protracted conferences today as the proper gov- ernment to succeed the fallen cab- inet of Edouard Daladier. M. Daladier's denunciation of the Socialist leader, Leon Blum, as the Chamber of Deputies this morning gave the Premier a:vote of no con- fidence on his budget-balancing wrecked present chances of bridging the breach. A resumption of the old Left ma- jority thus was considered impossible because of the bitterness between Daladier's party, the Radical Social- ist, and its erstwhile supporters, the Socialists. Favor Socialist Exclusion The elimination of the Socialists, whose hostile votes split the old ma- jority and drove out former Premiers Edouard Herriot and Joseph Paul- Boncour in the same way as they did Daladier, was declared essential in most camps. A possibility was seen tonight that Camille Chautemps, Radical party leader and former premier, or Jules Adolphe, Theodore Steeg, a Radical Socialist who has held many minis- terial posts, might be asked to try their luck at forming a cabinet. If they fail, as many quarters ex- pected, Senator Albert Sarraut may be urged to form a strong ministry supported by the Center. Daladier's Return Unlikely The return ,of Daladier was sug- gested by the veteran Herriot, but this was considered unlikely unless the others fail. Meanwhile, the broad lines of the present foreign policy and the safe- guarding of the franc were expected to continue. It was on the franc issue that Daladier's government got into trouble. He had asked an 8,000,000,- 000-franc (about $440,000,000) taxa- tion and economy program as essen- tial to balancing the budget and pro- tecting the franc. He was defeated by 329 votes to' 241 on a measure of confidence re- sulting from an impasse on a com- promise amendment to cut in half the government's proposed reduction1 in civil servants' salaries. Officers Reserve Corps Will Honor Col. Rogers A reception and smoker in honor of Lieut-Col. Fredrick C. Rogers will= be held at 8 p. m. today in the Michigan Union. It is being spon- sored by the Ann Arbor chapter of, the Officers Reserve /Corps. Colonel Rogers will speak on the training of the reserve officer and will present a plan for the officers of this sector to be carried out this winter. The entire chapter of the local R.O.T.C. is expected to attend and an invitation was also extended to members of the Army and Navy club, Scabard and Blade, Pi Tau Pi Sigma,] and all reserve officers. Uniformsi will not be required. Hitler Pleads For Backing Of Germany We Desire To Live With All Others In Harmony,' Says Chancellor Speaks Bitterly Of French Armaments Says Germany Suicidally Scrapped Weapons And Had Great Army BERLIN, Oct. 24.-(P)-Chancellor Adolf Hitler pleaded with Germany today to endorse his regime in its efforts to win equality for Germany abroad and domestic peace at home. "We desire to live with all others in peace," he asserted. "Let others draw the consequences. We shall sign nothing that is dishonorable. If any nation is entitled to claim divine help it is Germany. "I would rather die than act dis- honorably toward my nation. If I fail therein send me to the gallows." His appeal was in a 95-minute ad- dress marking the inauguration of the Reichstag election campaign in preparation for the Nov. 12 plebis- cite on the administration's foreign policy. His irony was bitter as he talked of French armaments. "We almost suicidally scraped arm- aments," he continued. "We had one of the greatest armies in the world, yet we completely disarmed. The world might have disarmed also. + "It was mutual distrust of our vic-, tors that compelled them to re-arm. It is not true that other states fear3 us-that would be too much honor." When the Nazis undertook to "master" the ills of Germany on Jan. 30, the chancellor said, they found room everywhere with Marxism de-] stroying the country. This threat, he said, was success-I fully fought, however, and the ad-1 ministration thereupon "conducted a war upon class war and fought for a restoration of faith in, the nation,j confidence in our administration and justice." Capacity Crowd Hears First Of Concert Series' I is the basis of commod- government economists t, though the prices are in dollars and though, abandonment of the gold :ollars no longer can be for gold. n To Give Organ d This Afternoon limer Christian will give ng organ recital at 4:15 ill Auditorium. scant on the chorale "Nun 1 lieben"; Clerambault: rescobaldi: Toccata per Bach: Fantasia and minor; Jongen: Sonata on: Prelude on an ancient lody; Jepson: Pantomime; iristian: Prelude to "The monel." J. P. Morgan Returns Official From Vatican Talks HereTonight Monsignor Eugene Tisserant, li- brarian of the Vatican Library in Rome, who is now visiting the Uni- versity library and campus on his re- turn trip from the conference of the International Federation of Library Associations held last week in Chi- cago, will address the Ann Arbor li- brary Club at 8:15 p. m. today in the Main Library on some aspects of the Vatican Library, William W. Bishop, University librarian, has announced. The library meetings in Chicago were also attended by Mr. Bishop, who is president of the International, Federation, and Prof. Howard M. Jones of the English department. Professor Jones delivered a paper on "The Place of Books and Reading in Modern Society," which Mr. Bishop reports was very enthusiastically re- ceived. Monday and Tuesday the library was also visited by Mr. J. D. Caw- ley, librarian of the Lancashire Coun- ty Library with headquarters located at Preston, England, Dr. Bry- cha-Vauthier, law librarian of the League of Nations at Geneva, Mr. Martin Roberts, superintendent of the reading room of the Library of Congress, and Mr. Usher, librarian of the Howard Library of New Or- leans. Several other men from the Chicago conferences are expected by Juniors Vot Today Fori Class Offi Hill Auditorium was filled to ca- pacity last night when the Boston Symphony Orchestra, under the di- rection of Dr. Serge Koussevitzky, inaugurated the fifty-fifth annual series of Choral Union Concerts. The audience of more than 4,500 persons, composed of students, fac- ulty members, townspeople, and a large number of visitors from other cities, enthusiastically applauded Dr. Koussevitzky at the conclusion of the concert. This is the third con- secutive year that the Boston organi- zation has given the initial concert of the Choral Union series. Dr. Charles A. Sink, president of the School of Music and the Uni- versity Musical Society, stated that Ann Arbor concert-goers evidenced by their attendance last night that the attempts of the organization to make the 1933-34 season as attractive as possible had not been in vain. SNOW IN CHEBOYGAN CHEBOYGAN, Oct. 24.-()-The first snow of the season fell here Monday night, and this morning, be- fore a light rain set in, housetops and trees were white. ; -Associated Press Pnoto J. P. Morgan, America's most noted banker, returning to New York from a three months' sojourn in Europe, posed for cameramen and greeted press representatives. Varsity Yo-Yo Team Withdraws Because Of Stringent Rules Because Varsity Yo-Yo Capt. Rob- ert Saltzstein was nipped in the act of selling his team's signals yester- day, he will be replaced by Charles Jewett, '34, a top-twirler of several years' standing, according to San Loco Mindanao, Grad., trainer of the Varsity's fighting squad. "We weren't going to use the sig- nals anyway," Trainer Mindanao re- ported, "but we thought it would be wisest to avoid any scandal, so we let Saltzstein go. There will be no prosecution. "Jewett will make a fine captain, I am sure;" the dark-haired trainer continued. "He has some fine over- hand yo-yo spins, and a windup that is really great." Jewett, when informed of his cap- taincy, at once withdrew the team from the contest altogether, because of the difficult rules for competi- tion laid down by the Ann Arbor Daily News, which is sponsoring the tournament. Fraternities To Send Stewards To Talk Toniffht Co-operative Buying Will Be Topic Of Discussion; Plan Coming Soon A meeting of the stewards of all fraternity houses will be held at 7:30 p. m. today at the Union, according to Bethel B. Kelley, '34, president of the Interfraternity Council, which is sponsoring the discussions. Stewards from professional frater- nities have been extended a special invitation from Maxwell T. Gail, '34, secretary-treasurer of the council. Interest in these meetings has in- creased to the extent that it is planned to hold an election at the next spring meeting for the purpose of organizing the house managers into a definite organization, Gail said last night. The plan of co-operative buying, which has been under con- sideration by council officials will be made public within the next few weeks, Gail stated. McCann Sentenced To Life In Prison DETROIT, Oct. 24. - Edward J. McCann was sentenced Tuesday by Recorder's Judge Christopher E. Stein to serve life imprisonment in solitary confinement and at hard labor for the murder of his wife. He will be sent to the prison at Marquette. McCann heard the sentence he expected without emotion. A frac- tion of a second after the judge had finished speaking, he nodded his head jerkily, as though ty say "That's that 11ne nrniim~ e naa,_a+.a3 Post Of J-Hop Chairma To Be Filled By Electioi In Engineering College Many New Parties Appear On Ticke Two Coalition Ca tdidates Desert Party And Joil State Street Ranks With two parties in each school having announced candidates fo elections to be held this afternoon in the junior classes of both the en- gineering and literary colleges, cam- paigning entered its final phase last night. The most important post to be filled, that of general chairman o the 1935 J-Hop, will be decided in the engineering college, where Philip Singleton, Phi Kappa Psi and presi- dent of Triangles, will run against Salvadore M. Tramontana, member of the Phi Kappa fraternity. Single- ton is the choice of the combined Fraternity-Independent party and Tramontana was nominated by the "New Deal" party. In the literary college two parties have announced candidates who will be voted on today for the four class offices and the various positions onr are the University-Coalition party, an outgrowth of the old Washtenaw party with the .addition of several new houses, and the State Street party, junior branch of the group that unanimously won the senior elections last week. Their candidates are as follows: University-Coalition party, for presi Times And Places For All Elections Announced Elections for junior class officers in ll schools and coileges will be held today at the following times and places: The literary college elections from 4:15 to 5:45 p. M, Room 25, Angell Hall; engineering college from 3 to 4 p. in., in Room 348 West Engineering Building; Law School from 4:15 to 5:15 p. m. in Room 150 Hutchins Hall. The School of Business Admin- istration will vote from 4:15 to 5:15 p. M., Room 206 Tappan Hall; Medical School from 1 to 1:30 p.m.in the Clinical Micros- copic Laboratory; and the college of architecture from 4 to 5 p. n. in the Architectural Building. dent, William Renner, Alpha Sigma Phi and Varsity football; vice-presi- dent,. Georgina Karlson, Mosher- Jordan, independent; secretary, Eliz- abeth Aigler, Delta Gamma; and treasurer, Russell Fuog, Phi Delta Theta and Varsity football. For members of the J-Hop com- mittee they announced Charles Brownson, Sigma Nu and Alpha Nu; Sidney Frankel, independent, sports assistant on The Daily; James Eberle, Alpha Tau Omega; Ruth Kaser, Alpha Chi Omega; and Ann Dunbar Gamma Phi Beta. The junior State Street party last night revealed that two men who were nominated for the J-Hop com- mittee by the Coalition party had withdrawn and are now running on the State Street ticket for the same positions. They are Willard Blaser Delta Phi, Sphinx, and member of the Gargoyle staff, and Frank Lan- ers, Phi Kappa. Leaders of the Uni- versity-Coalition party denied that these two men had withdrawn, stat- ing that they had been dropped from their ticket. Both men in turn denied that they had been dropped. For class offices the State Street party has named the following: for president, Joseph Horak, Chi Psi, Varsity cheerleader, and member of the Gargoyle staff; vice-president, Ann Osborne, Pi Beta Phi; secretary, Rosalind Cook, Martha Cook; and treasurer, William Borgmann, Delta Tau Delta and Varsity football. Other candidates for the J-Hop committee on the State Street ticket are: William Morgan, Psi Upsilon, assistant baseball manager; Myron Ruby, Sigma Alpha Mu and member of the Gargoyle staff; Ralph Tracy, independent; and John Healey, Al- pha Delta Phi, Sphinx, and Varsity cheerleader. 'Uncle Ton's Cabin' Opens Local Dramatic Season Tonight The campus dramatic season will be officially opened tonight when Play Production presents George L. Aiken's dramatization of Harriet Beecher Stowe's famous novel, "Un- cle Tom's Cabin," at 8:30 p. m. in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theater. Starred in the title role of the old negro, Uncle Tom, will be Frederick 0. Crandall, who was featured in this part during the Summer Session presentation. He will be remembered for his work in "Journey's End," and "Hay Fever" last season. Supporting him in front line parts T...- . -- ..... ,.....i. ... A . _. T%-.. Ross, Spec., will play the part of Aunt Hagar. The four children of Prof. James M. O'Neill of the speech department, ranging in ages from 7 to 12 years, have been cast in the play. Richard will play the part of Harry, who is carried across the famous cakes of ice by Eliza. James suffers almost the fate of his brother - he is little Caesar who is auctioned on the block. Brother Hugh and sister Mar- garet will assist their brothers in upholding the name of the family on the stage.