Th Cloudy a sibly snow Weather md colder today; pos- or rain; tomorrow LY Sir igart snow flurries and colder. -1 VOL. XLIV No. 51 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1933 I I ' Pennsylvania State PrisonIs Scene Of Riol Two Fires Within Wall Are Cause Of New Wil Disorders Officials Deny That Prisoners Escaped R u s h 500 Philadelphia City Police To Answer Emergency Alarm PHILADELPHIA, Nov. 21--UP) - Accompanied by the rattle of ma- chine guns and by two fires which started within the prison walls, a new riot broke out today in the Eastern State Penitentiary, scene of sporadic disorders for some time. Five hundred city police were rushed to the prison in answer to a general emergency alarm, and the apparatus of a fire company went clanging inside the walls. From the tops of near-by buildings the flames could be seen, and through the smoke figures were noticed dash- ing about, trying to elude the fire- men's hose training both on the fires and the prisoners, Within 15 minutes after the first call, Theodore Wood, director of safety, had led virtually every police- man within two miles of the prison inside the gates, armed with riot sticks, tear-gas bombs and service pistols.- Prison Break Rumored On the walls of the century-old prison, less than two miles from the center of the city, the guard was doubled, and machine guns were mounted on the parapets, while a report circulated that a "break" was impending. More policemen arrived continual- ly, many of them from.the reserve traffic squad, with half the motor- cycle brigade forming a cordon around the prison walls. A large crowd, which had been at- tracted by the sound of shots, were held back by the police cordon. Shouts and the noise of voices raised in protest were heard from in- side the walls. Prison authorities denied a report that three prisoners had succeeded in escaping. As the calls for more assistance continued, the police short-wave ra- dio was swung into action, summon- ing all patrol cars. Convicts Fire Mattresses First to emerge from within the walls after the alarm was Harry Colburn, chauffeur for a deputy chief fire engineer within. "The fire is going into the prison kitchen and the dye house," he said. "Some of the men have set fire to mattresses in their cells and they are driving others back into the cell blocks now." Word from within the prison said the outbreak started at the two-hour exercise period provided for the group of unruly prisoners who were segregated by Warden Herbert J. (Hard-Boiled) Smith after an upris- ing last Sunday in which many of the prisoners made a vain attempt to scale the walls with a makeshift ladder. The hoses of the fire company were turned into some of the cells and, besides putting out the burning mat- tresses, were played on the prisoners. Send Help o Snow Trapped Deer Hunters Conservation Officers And' Camp Detachments Cut Paths Through Drifts NEWBERRY, Mich., Nov. 21.--(P) - State conservation officers and de- tachments from Luce county civilian conservation corps camps tonight sought to break paths through- the snow-clogged roads of the Upper Peninsula to rescue 35 deer hunters reported marooned by the drifts on the east branch of the Tahquamenon Soviet's New Envoy Shouts ~'Shame' At -Associated Press Photo Alexander Trovanovsky, former Russian ambassador to Japan, was named as the first Soviet envoy to the United States. King George During Parliament Speech LONDON, Nov. 21. -(OP)-- The age-old pageant of regal splendor with which Parliament opened a new session today reached an unexpect- edly dramatic denouement in the cries of "Shame!" uttered by a La- borite member as King George ended his traditional speech from the throne. Before a throng of princes and diplomats, clothed in ermine and gold, King George pledged his gov- ernment's continued efforts to "pro- mote and sustain by every means in their power peace in the world" and "promote a return of the nation step by step to conditions which will per- mit easing the present burdens." "What about the means test and the unemployment cuts?" cried the Laborite, J. McGovern, as His Maj- esty turned and offered his arm to Queen Mary, ignoring the shout. "You are a gang of lazy, idle para- sites -living on wealth created by other people," McGovern shouted. "You ought to be ashamed of your- selves! It's a shame-- all this, while peoples are starving!" Among those who heard him were Lady Astor, American-born peeress, who said that she tried to quiet him "when he appeared to be considerably perturbed," and American Ambassa- dor Robert W. Bingham.- It was considered, unlikely that further notice would be taken of the dramatic break in the medieval tra- ditions. Most of the Commoners viewed the outburst as "just another incident in the political career of the ungovern- able McGovern." McGovern, a fol- lower of the Clydesdale extremists, is, 46 years old. Three Faculty Men Differ On German Views Will Speak In T Convocation B On Friday hree-Day leginni ng Detroit Chosen For First Slum Clearing Work Government Allots Sum Of $100,000,000 To Carry Out Housing Project WASHINGTON, Nov. 21.---(,)-The government moved further into the low cost housing field today with the allotment of $100,000,000 for such construction and the selection of De- troit for the first Federal slum clear- ance project. The apartment house planned for Detroit by the corporation is esti- mated to cost between $3,000,000 and $4,000,000 and the public works chief, Secretary Ickes, said his agency was prepared to finance about 20 similar buildings in other cities. The list was not made public but Ickes indicated that a list of the 20 largest cities in the country would not be far wrong. In allotting the $100,000,000 to the housing corporation the secretary said the Detroit project would not be built unless the price of the land to be acquired was reasonable. A further condition was that the city ask the Michigan Legislature to authorize a housing corporation to take over the Detroit construction eventually. Secretary Ickes said until the State set up a body to supervise such building the Detroit operation could be handled by the Federal gov- ernment through the housing cor- poration. , Officials estimated that the Detroit project, consisting of a row of two-{ story fireproof houses, would provide six months employment for 2,000 men working 30 hours a week each. Ward To Talk On Economics And Religion Pollock, Offer Points Parker, Dawson Widely Differing Of View Next To Last Sale Of 'Ensian Begins Today The next to last campus sale of the 'Ensian for a price of $3.50 will take place today and tomorrow. One more sale will take place before the price is raised to $4.50. The installment plan which has been used all year will continue, ac- cording to Arend Vyn, Jr., '34, busi- ness manager. This plan includes a down payment of $1 on the total. Vyn announced that second and third payments of books already signed for are now payable at the Student Publications Building on Maynard Street. A complete canvassing of fraterni- ty and sorority houses will be car- ried on in the near future until every house is covered. Two sharply contrasted points of view with regard to the advisability of Germany's withdrawal from the League were voiced last night in an open forum in Hutchins Hall, spon- sored by the Ann Arbor chapter of the League of Nations Association. Of three members of the University faculty who opened the discussion with considerations of the question, Prof. John Dawson of the Law School and Prof. James' K. Pollock of the political science department took def- inite stands against the recent Ger- man action. Prof. DeWitt H. Parker, chairman of the philosophy department, de- claring that the German action was inevitable and justified and that he opposed the League and favored a policy of American nationalism, was supported by a number of opinions from the floor. In the discussion following the talk of Professor Pollock, Prof. Preston W. Slosson of the history department endorsed the stand of the former. "There is no longer a choice between national isolation or co-operation, Isolation is an impossibility. We have the entanglements; it is only a ques- tion as to whether we shall have the alliances," he said. He was loudly applauded. Both Professor Dawson and Profes- sor Pollock expressed sympathy with the plight of the German people, but stated that a solution already near under the machinery of the League had been thoughtlessly discarded by German withdrawal "The Hitler action was opposed by both the best interests of the German people and the interests of world peace," Professor Pollock said. "Ger- many has prejudiced its case in the eyes of the rest of the nations ex- actly as it did in the World War." To Deliver Series Of Four Lectures Is A Professor At Union Theological Seminary, Author, And Speaker "Religion and the Economic Cri- sis" is the topic of the series of lec- tures which Dr. Harry F. Ward, emi- nent religious an4 social economic writer, will deliver to the public in a three-day convocation which starts Friday here. Dr. Ward, who is professor of Christian ethics at Union Theologi- cal Seminary, New York, will deliver his opening lecture, at 8 p. m. Friday in the Presbyterian church auditori- um on the subject "Extent of the Breakdown." His second lecture will be given at 2:30 p. m. Saturday in the auditorium at Lane Hall on "The Type of Society We Want." To Address Freshmen In place of the regular Freshman Round Table discussion sections which are held at 9:30 a. m. every Sunday in the League, Dr. Ward will address this group and the public at the same time on "How We Can Get This Society," at Lydia Mendelssohn theatre. "The Task of the Univer- sity Man or the Place of the Intel- lectual in Our Social Life" will be the subject of his final lecture which will be held at 8 p. m. Sunday in Hill Auditorium. Saturday noon Dr. Ward will be the guests of friends in the Univer- sity at an informal luncheon at the Union where he will also lead a dis- cussion on "Social Ethics in Our Time." Dr. Ward is characterized by Sher- wood A.. Messner, resident of the Student Christian Association, as a liberal in the religious world and an aggressive spokesman for a liberal view in the social theory. He has for a quarter of a century given' time and energy to oppressed groups, appearing as champion of free' speech and free press. At the pres- ent time he is head of the Civil Lib- erties Union. Author Of Many Books He has written many books on the subject of social religion and social economics. Among the former are the "Social Creed of the Churches," "Social Evangelism," "The Bible and Social Living," and "Which Way Re- ligion." His noted writings in the field of social economics are "Poverty and Wealth," "The New Social Or- der," and "In Place of Profit." The last, his latest book, written after he had come back from a study of conditions in Russia last year, deals1 with the social economic problems of the Russian experiment. In September he gave a series of lectures before the annual Methodist church convention in Ypsilanti. His1 ectures there so impressed the Ann Arbor group who attended that they banded together and are bringing him here to Ann Arbor. 1 Dean Cooney IS Struck By Ato; Condition Good Was Formerly Dean Of College Of Engineering Here DETROIT, Nov. 21 - P) --Mor- timer E. Cooley, 78, State engineer for the public works administration and former dean of the University of Michigan College of Engineering, suffered a brain concussion tonight) when he was struck by an automo- bile as he crossed a street in down- town Detroit. Taken to Receiving Hospital and later to Harper Hospital, Mr. Cooley tonight was fully conscious and in good spirits. His condition was not regarded as critical. The accident occurred as darkness fell. Leaving his offices in the Fisher Building, where he was engaged in compiling a report on the proposed Detroit subway and the Port Huron international bridge, Mr. Cooley was College Clinic Is Provider Of Legal Service To Poor DURHAM, N. C., Nov. 21.--(P)- Racketeers in North Carolina are feeling forceful blows from quarters they least expected - academic halls. For two years now the legal aid clinic of Duke University has been championing the cause of the people with small means who were made the victims of such rackets as wildcat stock sales, usury, and others. And what's more, these services are performed without cost if the appli- cant for legal advice proves to be unable to pay customary fees to law- yers. For that reason the clinic has come to be known the length and breadth of the State as "the poor man's law office." "The headlines of the newspapers tell us of kidnapping, rum running, and other rackets in which the wealthy are the victims," said Prof. John S. Bradway, director of the clinic. "But it is not so well known that the unscrupulous find the poor man frequently the easy victim of schemes netting large sums. "North Carolina has petty rack- eteers working alone, in pairs or small groups, who are bleeding the uninformed and helpless of their hard-earned money." Prof. Bradway gave examples of petty racketeering in which intimi- dation played a part or where gross advantage was taken of the victim's ignorance of the law. He pointed to the case of a poor woman who had been paying weekly premiums on a life insurance policy for many years. Just when she thought it was about paid up, the collector told her the policy was worthless. Liquor Is sue Is To Be Debated In Legislature Both Houses Expected To Offer Sharp Differences On New Control Bill LANSING, Nov. 21.-( P) - Storm warnings flew in both houses of the Legislature as members prepared for the opening of the special session Wednesday noon. Sharp differences over the liquor control bill drafted by the legislative council appeared. Members of the council spent hours explaining the measure to legislators point by point, but argument continued. In the Sen- ate the opposition of some members was so vehement fear was expressed another deadlock similar to that which held up the 3.2 beer control bill might be in the offing.' To avoid the possibility of a tie- up in the Senate liquor committee there was talk of seeking to steer the bill to another committee or direct to the floor. Senator A. J. Wilkowski, Dem., Detroit, chairman of the liquor body, indicated he wished to propose several changes. The liquor control measure, pro- posing the establishment of 75 State stores, designated distributors, sales by the glass in cities and villages with the approval of local governing bodies,. and giving broad regulatory powers to the State liquor control commission will be introduced in the House by Rep. Carl F. Delano, Rep., Kalamazoo, and George H. Schoen- hals, Dem., St. Johns. It will be sub- mitted in the opening session, Wed- nesday afternoon, and will be re- ferred at once to committee. Governor Comstock, in his special message, is expected to endorse the council bill. He said today there are features he does not particularly like. He stated that at no time in its history has American labor been con- fronted with a situation as full of great possibilities as is created by. legislation embodied in the National. Recovery program. Admitting that it is not the inten- tion of the conference to reach any conclusion leading to a line of action nor to take a stand for or against any line of procedure, Professor Hand- man declared that the sole purpose of the convention is to find out, by study and discussion, just what, for American labor, is the significance of the governmental activities of the last six months. "Probably the most pertinent phase of the entire institute will come Saturdaynmorning," Professor Handman concluded, "when dele- gates will hear a discussion of the automobile code, which affects Mich- igan more than any other state, given by a man who helped formulate it, Jack Anderson of labor headquarters in Washington." To Pay One Dollar For Novel Campus Pictures Student readers of The Daily and the Collegiate Digest, the ro- togravure section appearing in the Sunday issue of The Daily, will be paid $1 for unusual snapshots of student and faculty activities, it was announced yesterday by Thomas K. Connellan, '34, man- aging editor of The Daily. All photos should be sent to the editor of the Collegiate Di- gest, Madison, Wis., or to The Daily. No limitation will be made on the number accepted from each student. By WILLIAM G. FERRIS Final tabulations in the all-campus straw vote conducted by the Under- graduate Council indicate that stu- dents in the University favor a mod- ification in the auto ban, the insti- tution of the honor system, the aboli- tion of compulsory physical education for both men and women, the con- tinuance of the R.O.T.C, modifica- tion of women's hours, and sale of beer east of Division Street. The vote was the most extensive ever taken on campus. On the only question not directly concerned with the campus, war par- ticipation, most students said they would fight for their country only in case it was invaded by an enemy, an almost equal number said they would fight for their country in any war, and a much smaller number said they would not fight for their country in any war at all. Want 25 Cent Movies An overwhelming number of the voters said they considered 25 cents a "fair" price to charge for movie at- tendance, while the median price for class dances was set by the voters as $2.50. Most men thought that $5 was a fair price and most women decided upon $2, but there was no really out- standing preference for any of the sums mentioned on the ballot. As an orchestra for class dances, Guy Lombardo was the overwhelm- ing favorite with every class, and Hal Kemp was second. After that there was no concerted opinion, practically all the outstanding orchestras in the country, and a good many that aren't, being named. Keep Auto Restrictions Although students voted that the auto ban should not continue as it is, 1,403 to 1,017, the great majority thought the ban had a number of good points and should not be en- tirely abolished. The vote here was 561 for complete abolishment of the ban and 1,427 op- posed to such action. Modification to permit students with degrees to drive was favored by 1,477 and was opposed by 474. This was the only modification which received student approval, 917 voting against allowing all seniors to drive while 723 favored such a proposal, and 983 opposed permitting driving on the basis of scholastic achievement while 727 ap- proved this latter idea. The vote on war participation, which aroused the most interest among people not directly concerned with college affairs, and which also aroused the most confusion among those voting because of the manner in which the statements were worded, showed that 647 students checked the statement saying, "I will not sup- (continued on Page 6) Attempt To Get 'A Special Train For Game Trip In an effort to organize a large number of students going to the Michigan-Northwestern football game Saturday to support the Varsity in the final game of the season, an at- tempt is being made to charter a special train running from Ann Arbor to Chicago. Thomas B. Roberts, '34, head cheerleader, who is sponsoring the project, explained last night that the offer of reduced rates and special ac- commodations for students should make it possible for many to take the trip who would not otherwise be able to back the team in its fight to re- tain the Western Conference cham- pionship. He stated that in order to make the completion of the plan possible it was necessary for 125 to 150 to reserve places on the train. Reservations for Vienna Boys Choir, Appearing Here Today, On Initial Tour I Kipke Says 'Knee Rule' Costs All Teams Many Touchdowns The University of Michigan foot- ball team has been able to work its "old 83" play this fall without hav- ing the quarterback drop to his knees as was the ancient custom, but nev- ertheless Coach Harry Kipke is out gunning for the rule which stops a play automatically whenever a ball carrier's knee touches the ground. Kipke maintains that this rule, which became effective with the start without any tackler touching him. It lost us two or three certain touch- downs. "The outstanding incident was in the Michigan-Chicago game. On the last play of the first half Stan Fay crossed the Chicago goal line, but the ball was downed two feet out because his knee touched the ground there. The period ended before the teams could line up again. The Vienna Boys Choir, which will present the third program of the Fifty-fifth Annual Series of Choral Union Concerts at 8:15 p. m. today in Hill Auditorium, is now making its initial tour of this country, coming here from the Court School of Vien- na, where it is normally quartered in a wing of the palace. Under the direction of the Rev. Father Joseph Schnitt, the officiating priest of the former Imperial Chapel, these boys make their residence in the quarters of the Vienna palace that was at one time especially re- they have passed the stiffest entrance tests for admission to this unique organization. These youngsters whom the Swiss call the "Song Birds from out Vien- na" and whom Pope Pius XI most recently blessed for their "voices as flutelike and sweet as those of angels of paradise," are known among music lovers as "princes of song" and it is not unseemly that they dwell in the emperor's castle which was the pulse of a powerful monarchy for hun- dreds on hundreds of years. Today this castle lies, sprawling its wings over the heart of a great I