I Editorials Michigan Government; AND Fmattems Men And Local Fraternity Men C, r SirF :4Iaiti The Weather I Cloudy and much cooler to- day. Friday .fairer. VOL. XLIV No. 141 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, APRIL 19, 1934 PRICE FIVE CEN Lawyers Will Stage Finals In Case Cub Seventh Annual Founders Day To Conclude Series Of Arguments 56 Are Eliminated By Junior Finalists Henry M. Campbell Prize Of $150 To Be Awarded To Contestants Among the main events of the sev- enth annual Founders' Day exercises to be held tomorrow at the Lawyers Club will be the final argument of the Case Club work, featuring .four jun- iors who have survived weeks of ar- gument in which 56 of their class- mates fell by the wayside. The four contestants who have survived the series of competitions are: John T. Damm of Ashland, Ohio, and James H. Denison of New Ro- chelle, N. Y., against Michael L. Lew- ison of Flint, and Milton C. Selander of Dixon, Ill. $100 of the $150 Henry M. Campbell Case Club Award will be presented to winning counsel and $50 to the losing counsel. The bench which has been selected to hear the argument will consist of: Mr. Rush C. Butler, a distinguish- ed Chicago attorney and one of the chief speakers at the Founders' Day Banquet, Hon. Charles C. Simons, '00L, Judge of the U. S. Circuit Court of Appeals, of Detroit, also a speaker at the banquet, and Hon. Frederick M. Raymond, U. S. District Judge, of Grand Rapids. The argument, this year, will be held at 2:30 p.m. in room 100 of Hutchins Hall, the new Law School building, one of the rooms which can be made to resemble a court room. The public is invited. Mr. Butler and Judge Simons, who will be guest speakers at the Found- ers' Day Banquet to be held at. 6:30 p.m. in the main dining room of the Law Club, have both established themselves in their profession. Mr. Butler, a graduate of Iowa State University Law School in the class of 1893, member of the Ameri- can and Chicago Bar Association, president of the Illinois State Bar Association in 1927 and 1928, and president of the Illinois Association of Criminal Justice, is also co-author of a work on the Federal Trade Com- mission. Judge Simons, a graduate of the University of Michigan Law School in the class of 1900, has been a mem- ber of the Michigan State Senate, Michigan constitutional convention of 1908, and a presidential elector at large. His appointment to the bench was made by President Harding in 1923. Lynch Mob Is Dispersed By Police, Militia 1 7 3 a Brown Calls Washington Of Today A ThreeRing Circus' EDITOR'S NOTE: The following ar- ticle was written at the special request of The Daily by Prof. Everett S. Brown of the political science department who spent part of the recent vacation in the nation's capital. The article presents a brief summary of current washington happenings based upon observations of Professor Brown. By PROF. EVERETT S. BROWN From the newspaper point of view, the outstanding event of the past week in Washington was the Wirt hearing on Tuesday morning. Dr. Wirt's charges of a Brain Trust con- spiracy to use President Roosevelt as a tool to undermine the foundations of our government had been herald- ed far and wide an hour before the doors of the caucus room of the new House Office Building were opened. An eager crowd had gathered, seek- ing entrance. The room was soon filled to overflowing and hundreds of disappointed persons stood in the hallways outside. Flanking the tables at which the committee and witness sat was a battery of motion picture machines. Photographers were sta- tioned at every available spot. The glaresof Klieg lights was almost blind- ing. Time after time the chairman of the committee ordered the lights to be turned off but always within a few minutes they were flashed on again. Microphones and loud speak- ers carried the proceedings to listen- ers in all parts of the country. The crowd was decidedly partisan. The frequent outbursts of applause and the casual remarks overheard in the audience made it evident that Dr. Wirt had many supporters. Yet it was soon apparent that the basis of Dr. Wirt's charges was very flimsy, so much so that the whole affair de- generated into a farce. As political capital it was worth practically noth- ing at all to those who had hoped to gain by it. Washington was like a three-ringed circus. There were so many interest- ing performances that one found it difficult to decide which ring to watch. During my stay my choices, aside from the Wirt hearing, were sessions of the Senate, which was debating the tax bill; hearings on the Wagner labor bill; hearings on the proposed amendment to the consti- tution to change the method of elect-, ing the president; hearings of com- plaints against NRA codes; and the trial of Bishop Cannon., The complaints against the pro- (Continued on Page 6) Ohio Professor Will Speak At Banquet Friday Henry R. Spencer Is To Address Dinner Meeting Of Model Assembly Henry R. Spencer, professor of po- litical science at Ohio State Univer- sity, will be the principal speaker at the banquet of the Model Assembly of the League of Nations Friday eve- ning at the League. His speech will deal with the future of the League of Nations, tying up with the sympo- sium at the Saturday luncheon on the reorganization of the League. Prof. Jesse Reeves, head of the Uni- versity political science department, will introduce the speaker, who has travelled extensively in Europe, and is an authority on the foreign rela- tions of Italy. Prof. Spencer has also lectured widely in this country on in- ternational subjects. Patrons and patronesses for the dance, which will follow the banquet Friday, are Pres. and Mrs. Alexander Ruthven, Dean and Mrs. Joseph Bur- sley, Dean and Mrs. Allen Whitney, and Mrs. Leona Diekema. The dance is to be in the League ballroom, with Bill Marshall's orchestra supplying the music. Tickets for the banquet, which is at 6 p.m. Friday, and for the Saturday luncheon at 12 a.m.. may be obtained Friday morning after 10 a.m. at the registration desk of the Model As- sembly in the main lobby of the League. For those who wish to attend the dance and not the banquet, an ad- mission charge of 25c will be taken at the door of the ballroom that eve- ning. In addition to those attending the Model Assembly as official delegates, a number of out-of-town guests are expected to be present at the meet- ings. A group of Canadians and Amer-. icans from the border towns, who have been meeting once a month for Satur- day luncheons and discussions for the past three years, will be here for the Saturday luncheon. Mr. Paul Martin, barrister of Windsor, and a former member of the legal section of the Secretariat of the League of Nations, will preside at the informal discus- sion of the group, which will meet by Itself following the luncheon, to dis- cuss questions' of interest to Cana- dians and Americans. Four Air Lines Fight Farley With Injunctions WASHINGTON, April 18. -(P) - Four suits intended to force Post- master General James A. Farley to restore cancelled airmail contracts were filed today while the House Post- office Committee was deciding against a new letting of long-term contracts prior to the mapping of a permanent air policy. The companies which asked an in- junction in the District of Columbia Supreme Court to restrain the Post- master General from enforcing con- tract cancellation were the Boeing Air Transport, Inc.; National Air Trans- port, Inc.; Pacific Air Transport and Varney Airlines. The four were among the concerns whn ecntracts were canelled nn Vote On J.G.P. Positions Will Be Held Today Second-Year Women Will Ballot For Committee Members Sophomore elections for positions on the central committee of the Jun- ior Girls Play, which were postponed from before vacation, will take place at 4 p.m. today in the Lydia Men- delssohn Theatre. All sophomores are eligible to vote. Nominations for the five positions have been made by the sophomores themselves by application. Petitions from those desiring positions on the committee were handed in to the un- dergraduate office stating the schol- arship, activities, and special capabil- ities of the applicants. These petitions will be presented to the assembly today. The sophomore woman receiving the highest number of votes will be- come general chairman, the second highest, assistant chairman, the third, finance chairman, with the other two positions exchangable, depending on the talents of the women. The Judiciary Council, under the direction of Harriett Jennings, '34, will be in charge of elections. Miss Jennings has made a plea to the soph- omores to abolish caucusing. It was due to what the Council termed "ex- cessive caucusing" that the elections were postponed, and the new system of nominations adopted. The Council will also introduce a new election method today, in an attempt to make the elections fair, according to Miss Jennings. Student Jobs Go Begging; College Men Are All Busy The depression, for University stu- dents at least, seems not only to have turned the corner, but to have gone on down the street that the corner is on. This time last year dozens of hard-up college men flocked to the employment bureau in the office of the dean of students in search of em- ployment. Now the few jobs which come into that office are going a'beg- ging. The reason for this lies partly in the fact that more than 700 students are being aided by FERA jobs. And many of the others must be getting encouraging letters from home - the kind that can be cashed. Last year many of them were forced to leave school for financial reasons; now Miss Elizabeth Smith, who conducts the employment bureau, says that local landladies are wondering how they are going to get their spring house- cleaning done. "There is a large amount of gar- den and lawn work to be done at this time of the year in addition to spring housecleaning," Miss Smith says, "and any students in need of work should take advantage of the oppor- tunities. It is as difficult now to find students for the jobs as it was to find jobs for the students last year." Me annld1 Will PAmente Choose New President Of Counclil oon Fraternity ody Plans To Select Officers For Next Year On May 8 B. B. Kelly Retires As Head Of Group Student Members Of The Judiciary Committee To Be Elected The election of a new president of the Interfraternity Council to suc- ceed Bethel B. elley, '34, will take place at the fin.l council meeting of the year to be held May 8. Student members of the council judiciary committee will also be chosen at that time. The selection is usually made from one of the tryouts for the council, al- though the rule has been broken in the past when none of the candidates was considered suitable. Other business which will come be- fore the delegates at that time will be a consideration ,of a substitute for the proposed Indictment Board to consider evidence of alleged violations of the rushing rules, since the new rushing rules passed by the council have been rejected by the Judiciary Committee on that point. The rest of the rushing rules were approved without change by the Judiciary Committee, and now need only the approval of the Senate Com- mittee on Student Affairs before they become effective. Since the Judiciary Committee has no initiative po ~r in the making of rules, it will pr bably make a rec- ommendation to the council in the message rejecti g the Indictment Board provision. The new provision will have to be passed on by the Judiciary Committee before it is sent to the Senate committee with the other regulations.' The office of secretary-treasurer of the council is.fIllked by the Judiciary Committee after interviews with the tryouts for the council. The annual stipend attached to the office is $100. No announcement has been made as to when the new secretary-treas- urer will be selected, but it is custom- ary to make the selection some time before the final meeting of the year in May. Membership In Body Extended By Constitution A revamped constitution for the Engineering Council, student govern- ment organization of the College of Engineering, was unanimously adopt- ed at a meeting of the council yester- day. The constitution had previously been approved by Dean H. C. Sadler and Prof. Henry C. Anderson, director of student relations Membership in the Council was ex- tended to include representatives from Tau Beta Pi, Triangles, Vulcans, and Sigma Rho Tau as well as organiza- tions already represented. Organiza- tion and class representatives will be elected in May in order to have the Council organized before the close of the second semester. Concerts To Raise Funds For Memorial Scholarships To H o n o r Albert Lockwood Will Be Established First Program To Be Offered May 2 Purpose Will Be To Attract Musical Talent To The University The first of a series of concerts for the benefit of the Albert Lockwood Memorial Scholarship Fund will be given May 2 in Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre by Prof. Joseph Brinkman of the School of Music, it was announced yesterday by the committee in charge of the fund. . The purpose of the scholarship fund, recently established as a me- morial to the late Albert Lockwood, is to attract superior musical talent to the University. It is hoped by the committee in charge of the fund that it eventually will be large enough to afford the opportunity to study in Ann Arbor to outstanding musicians throughout the country who, because of financial difficulties, would not otherwise be able to continue their musical educations. Professor Brinkman's concert in May will begin a series which will spread over the next few years and which will feature both local and visiting artists. The program w h i c h Professor Brinkman will present will comprise three Beethoven sonatas -the "Pa- thetique," the "Apasionata," and the "Hammerklavier," the latter rarely being performedowing to its great technical difficulties. The scholarship fund is being built up by private contributions as well as by the concert series. In addition to students, friends, and colleagues of Professor Lockwood, such promi- nent nationally and internationally famous musicians as Frederick Stock and Joseph Lhevinne have endorsed the fund and sent generous donations to it. At the end of an adequate time in- terval it is planned to present the names of all contributors in some appropriate form as part of the per- manent record of the memorial. The committee in charge of the fund consists of Prof. Willoughby Boughton, of the Detroit Institute of Arts, and Professors Walter Colby, James Glover, Peter Okkelberg, Otto Stahl, and Morris Tilley of the Uni- versity. Vice-President Shirley Smith is an ex-officio member of the com- mittee, serving it as treasurer. Society Will Honor JDr. May, 12 Others CLEVELAND, 0., April 18-- (A') -- Thirteen men and women who have done outstanding work in physical education will be honored tonight at the first general session of the Ameri- can Physical Education association and the Mid-West Society of Physi- cal Education, meeting jointly in a four-day convention here. Two thousand physical educators gathered in Cleveland today for the convention and prepared for prelim- inary meetings and legislative coun- cils. The 13 to be honored include Dr. George A. May of the University of Michigan. Prof. Joseph Brinkman of the School of Music, who will present the first of the series of Albert Lockwood Memorial Scholarship Fund concerts, May 2, in Lydia Mendelssohn Thea-. tre. Fan Mah Brow! It's Sally Rand Wrho'll Teach. Opera Boys Sally Rand is coming to town today. But, sad to relate boys, not for an exhibition of the art that she made famous. The greatest single attrac- tion at the World's Fair last summer will devote her time to showing mem- bers of the Union Opera's football chorus how dancing 'is really done. But, don't misunderstand - it doesn't mean that you'll see Mich- igan's national football champions doing fan dances. What Sally will teach them will be plain old-fashioned steps for chorus numbers. Incidentally, Paramount Newsrcam- eramen will be on hand to record the performance, so even if you can't look on today, before long you'll see it at the movies. For Chuck Bernard and "Whitey" Wistert, two of the biggest attractions of the Opera chorus, it will be the second venture before the camera with national celebrities. Before va- cation they went to Detroit to visit Mary Pickford and learn some of the art of makeup, and pictures taken at the time appeared in papers from Paducah to Timbuctoo, or nearly. Sally will be at the Michigan The- atre, where the pictures will be taken, at 11 a.m. A coincidence learned yes- terday was that William Dickert, '34, character actor in the Opera cast, went to school with Miss Rand in Kansas City, as did one other stu- dent in the University. Opera officials are considering put- ting a guard at the theatre to prevent any rioting when Sally appears. Conference Of Musicians Will To Give Concert Germany Hits At Peace Pact By Rearng11 French Note To England Interpreted As Dashing Hopes Of Agreement Says Negotiations Are Not Possible Hitler 'Renders Vain' All Attempts To Stop Race For Arms PARIS, April 18- (A) - Germany was charged today with scuttling arms limitation hopes by rearming in defiance of the world. A strong French note to Great Britain was interpreted as wrecking any chances of an immediate arms agreement and said negotiations are "impossible" since Germany is of- ficially admitted to be rearming her land, air, and sea forces. Premier Gaston Doumergue and foreign minister Louis Barthou draft- ed the memorandum which supple- ments a previous communication in which France asked a new arms lim- itation conference. It declared the Reich was the "sole judge" of her rights to rearm and that Chancellor Adolph Hitler "ren- dered vain" all attempts to stop a race for more weapons. The note referred to an increased German armament budget as proof that she is rearming without regard to the post-war Versailles treaty or other nations. "In reality," the document de- clared, "without awaiting the result of negotiations which were going on, the German government has shown its determination to continue its re- armament in all forms and within limits of which it is the sole judge, and without regard for the disposi- tion of the treaty of Versailles, which, in the absence of any other conven- tion continues to fix the level of its armaments. "Germany intends to increase im- mediately in heavy proportion not only the strength of her army but also the navy and aviation. "Whatever explanations one may try to give the German actions, these facts are of such exceptional gravity that they call for strong observa- tions." i Perhaps It's Because The Coffee Isn't Dated J Meet April 271 Confessed layer Of Is Protected; Will Quickly Prosecuted Girl le SHREVEPORT, La., April 18. -(A) - An impressive display of armed force by local police, sheriff's deputies and four companies of national guardsmen today restored order in the vicinity of the eight-story Caddo parish courthouse where an infur- iated mob last night attempted to lynch Fred Lockhart, confessed slayer of Mae Griffin, 16-year-old Shreve- port schoolgirl. Last remnants of the mob were dis- persed before dawn with the arrival of the militia after hours of fisticuffs between local authorities and the yelling crowd, during which the angry demonstrators succeeded in pushing into the basement of the court house in their effort to reach the prison tiers on the seventh and eighth floors. Scores of persons suffered minor in- juries in the clash and more than a dozen arrests were made as the crowd hurled bricks and clubs and the police retaliated with tear gas bombs and threats to fire machine guns mounted on staircases. Damage to the million-dollar court- house building was estimated at sev- eral hundred dollars. Although two young women were prominently to the fore of the mob, exhorting men in the crowd to action, they were not among those arrested. Revival Of Union Opera Recalls Productions Of Former Years Held As Part Of Annual Schoolmasters' Meeting Here Next Week Demonstrations and discussions covering practically all phases of music teaching will feature the music conference to be held Friday, April 27, as a division of the annual School- masters' Club convention, according to Dr. Charles A. Sink, president of the School of Music and chairman of the conference. With the conference this year in the nature of a music clinic, the fa- cilities of the school will be at the disposal of visiting musical directors, supervisors, and teachers. Special demonstrations will be held through- out the day in various rooms and studios of the School of Music Build- ing. Beginning with registration of dele- gates between 9 and 9:30 a.m. Friday, the program will continue with hour- ly discussions during the morning and afternoon. A luncheon will be held at 11:45 a.m. in the Union, with Dr. Sink presiding, and brief talks being offered. Motion pictures of the Na- tional Music Camp will be shown from 5 to 6 p.m. in Morris Hall. Gertrude Fleming, assistant super- visor of music in Detroit is secretary of the music conference. Members of the executive committee are Prof es- sors Earl V. Moore, Joseph E. Maddy, and David Mattern, all of the music school here. Call Jafsie' On Clew In Lindbergh Kidnan Case -"Europe's constant turmoil and warfare is due primarily to the fact that nowhere on the continent is a good cup of coffee obtainable," says Prof. Karl H. Reichenbach of the his- tory department. "If our cousins across the sea could know the soothing effects of a cup of coffee in the morn- ing, they would not be so militaris- tically inclined." It all began with Napoleon's "Con- tinental System," which forbade Eng- lish ships to bring any goods to Eu- ropean shores. The Europeans, denied their coffee, took to using substitutes, and although these were much in- ferior to their former beverage, they got so used to drinking them that they never again learned the noble art of making coffee. Substitute For Swingout Will Be Considered Undergraduate Council Is To Discuss New Ideas At Meeting Today Plans for a substitute function to take the place of Swingout, recently abolished by the Senate Committee on Student Affairs, will be discussed at a special meeting of the Under- graduate Council at 4:30 p.m. today in the Council rooms at the Union. The Undergraduate Council was in- structed by the Senate Committee to form, if possible, some substitute function for Swingout and was given approximately until May 1 to come to a decision. The Council's plan will then be submitted to the committee, which will make the final approval or disapproval of the plan. Members of the Council said last night that the chief objection to the The raising of the opening curtain on the premiere of the 25th Annual Union Opera, "With Banners Flying," next Tuesday night at the Whitney Theatre, will mark the revival, after a lapse of more than four years, of one of the most colorful campus tra- ditions and the beginning of a new series of operatic extravaganzas. Everything that contributed to the success of the earliest shows, includ- ing barrel-chested, hairy-legged he- men chorus girls, will be brought back in an effort to once more place the production on its former pedestal. The origination of the Michigan Opera dates back to February, 1908 when the idea was conceived as a means of obtaining funds for the sup- port of the then-struggling Union. Donal Hamilton Haines, now of the journalism department, wrote the A year later "Koanzaland," with its long - remembered songs, "College Days" and "Michigan, Good-by," made its appearance. "The Crimson Chest" came next and gave Michigan the rollicking rhythms of the famous "Bum Army" song composed by Earl V. Moore and J. Fred Lawton. So successful were the next two ef- forts of the Union, "The Awakened Rameses" and "Contrarie Mary," that a movement for a more extravagant production with the show going on the road was started and in 1914 "A Model Daughter"dhad successful appearances in both Detroit and Chi- cago. The next three shows, "All That Glitters," "Tres Rouge" and "Fools Paradise," were characterized by more elaborate costumes and scenery and longer road trips indicating a rapid