I Slightly cloudy today; tomor- row showers; not much change in temperature. 4w 41P vwmrquw 'A' 46h", all 4 9 aii Editorials Mouldy Laws... Money For The Navy ..,. VOL. XLIV No. 152 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, MAY 2, 1934 PRICE FIVE ( Depart From Tradition In Homecomng Family Banquet May 12 Is Most Important Of Two Changes Brucker Will Give PrincipalAddress Spring Games Be t w e ein Lower Classes Will Be Abandoned Spring Homecoming this year will bring two departures from the tradi- tional schedule that has been fol- lowed during the three years since the annual event began. Edward McCormick, '34, general chairman of the committee in charge, said that the changes are both in re- sponse to popular demand from stu- dents who will be hosts to their par- ents and friends during the three-day event. Most'prominent of these is the new arrangement for the Homecoming banquet, which will be held Satur- day, May 12. When Homecoming was first inaugurated as an annual spring event, the only banquet included was, fort mothers and daughters. After the first year the fathers, who had been without any event of their own the first year, were guests at a ban- quet for themselves and their sons. This year the schedule calls for a Family Banquet, which is planned to take the place of both former tradi- tional gatherings. The father and son banquet, and the luncheon for Michigan mothers are incorporated in this event. At the banquet Wilber M. Brucker, former governor of Mich- igan, will deliver the principal ad- dress. Another event that has been aban- doned is the. custom of holding the Spring Games between members of the two lower classes on Saturday morning of Homecoming week-end. It was felt this year that theeW. not enough interest in thein t 'W a rant including any such contests in the schedule. Neither the Under-g graduate Council nor the Union of- ficials saw any use in attempting to foster another year of the tradition when both freshmen and sophomores for several years have been apathetic concerning them. Cane Day, which has been con- tinue l -as a senior tradition this year1 by popular demand, will be held Sun-c day, May 13. At this time graduating1 seniors will carry for the first timet their straight sticks which designate them as members of the fourth year class. Sunday is also Mother's Day, and special services are being planned for the afternoon in Lydia MendelssohnC Theatre, as well as in all local church- es. Prestige Was Real Need Of IslandPeople Rohrer Says U. S. Shoulds H a v e Dispensed Withc Gold Braid On Officialsc Dr. Ermine C. Case Wil Give Annual Henry Russet Lecture Of the nine members of the Uni- versity faculty who have been se- lected to deliver the annual Henry Russel Lecture since the custom be- gan in 1925-26, seven have been chairmen of their departments, one chairman of the executive commit- tee of the Medical School, and one director of the pathological labora- tory. Dr. Ermine C. Case, who was named chairman of the geology department at the last meeting of the Board of Regents and is thus the seventh de- partment head, will deliver the 1933- 34 lecture at 4:15 p'.m. tomorrow in Natural Science Auditorium. Dr. Case is repeating history doubly in that Prof. William H. Hobbs, pres- ent geology departm'ent head who will retire this summer, was the Hen- ry Russel Lecturer in 1930-31. The department is the only one which has had two lecturers from its staff. Others who have received the hon- or, which is considered to belong an- nually to an outstanding member of the faculty ranking higher than as- sistant professor, are as follows: Prof. Moses Gomberg, chairman of the chemistry department, 1925-26; Dean Frederick G. Novy of the Medi- cal School, 1926-27; Prof. Henry A. Sanders, chairman of the depart- ment of speech and general linguis- tics, 1927-28; Dr. Aldred S. Warthin, former director of the pathological laboratory, 1928-29; Prof. Claude H. Van Tyne, head of the history de- partment, 1929-30. Professor Iobbs, 1930-31; Prof. Jesse S. Reeves, chairman of the po- litical science department, 1931-32; and Prof. Walter B. Pillsbury, chair- man of the psychology department, 1932-33. Dr. Case, whose present position is professor of historical geology and paleontology and director of the Uni- versity Museum, is known as one of the most outstanding men in his field in the country. The list of his writings includes more than 100 books, articles, and monographs, the best-known of them being his revi- sions of the Pelycosauria and the Co- tylosauria of North America and his reports on the Permo-Carboniferous vertebrates of the same area. The latter was published by the Carnegie Institute of Washington. In keeping with tradition, the win- ner of the Henry Russel Award, made annually to a faculty member not ranking higher than assistant pro- fessor on the basis of his promise for the future, will be announced. Prof. Werner E. Bachmbann of the chem- istry department received the Award last year. I Hull Expresses Disapproval COf JapanIn Note State Secretary Is Awaiting Reply Fir o m Japanese On 'Polite' Letter WASHINGTON, May 1.- (P) - The state department awaited far eastern reaction today to its polite but direct reminder to Japan that claims of "over-lordship in Asia" must stick within treaty limits. Cordell Hull, soft-spoken secretary of state, unfolded to newsmen Mon- day night a statemient asserting be- tw.th sfiMoothW, dipomatie, .language that the United States does not ap- prove of Japanese control, as project- ed, over Chinese affairs. The statement, delivered in sub- stance to Foreign Minister Hirota last Sunday by Ambassador Joseph C. Grew in Tokio, stated in effect: 1. That Japan is still a party to treaties for the maintenance of Chinese sov- ereignty. 2. That treaties cannot be legally "modified or terminated" ex- cept by the processes agreed upon by the contracting parties. 3. That the United States has certain rights in China and proposes to keep them. Borah Is Pleased Although both the Japanese ambas- sador and the Chinese minister here had 'no immediate statement con- cerning the American stand toward. the modified Nipponese policy, there came from Senator Borah (Rep., Ida.) a quick statement: "I like it very much and find my self in full agreement with it." In the statement handed out by Hull it was said: "Treaties can lawfully be modified or be terminated only by processes prescribed or recognized or agreed upon by the parties to them. "In the international associations and relationships of the United States, the American government seeks to be' duly considerate of the rights, the obligations and the legitimate inter- ests of other countries, and it expects on the part of other governments due consideration of the rights, the obliga- tions and the legitimate interests of the United States. Cites Need For Consent "In the opinion of the American people and the American government, no nation can, without the assent of the other nations concerned, right- fully endeavor to make conclusive its will in situations where there are in- volved the rights, the obligations and the legitimate interests of other sov- ereign states." Although Japan's original state- ment of April 17 opened the far east- ern question to international discus- sion, the Hull reply was based on a modified and considerably more con- ciliatory official statement issued on April 20 with Foreign Minister Hi- rota's approval. In it Japan asserted it had no in- tention of violating existing treaties, and no desire to close the 'open door' in China." TOKIO, May 1. - (P) -The gov- ernment appeared today to have adopted a policy of silence at home regarding its diplomatic exchanges on Japan's policy toward China abroad. Debate Societies To Conduct Probe Into Co-Eids' Intentions Announcement of the teams who will argue the question "Resolved, That the Michigan Co-Ed Comes to College for Other Than Scholastic Purposes," in the annual humorous debate between Athena Literary So- ciety, national forensic society for women, and Adelphi; men's speech club, at 7:30 p.m. today, was made yesterday. by heads of the two or- ganizations. The women who will uphold the scholastic seriousness of feminine students will be Dorothy Saunders, '35, president of Athena, Katherine Stoll, .-'35, - and Margaret .Dunn, '35. Members of Adelphi who will take the affirmative side of the question and attempt to prove that co-eds are here "because the home-town men are not eligible enough," will be Stew- art Cram, '34, Samuel Travis, '34, speaker of Adelphi, and William Fleming, '37. The meet is, according to custom, open to the public, said Miss Saun- ders and Travis. It will be held in the Adelphi Room on the fourth floor of Angell Hall. All- eeth oven Program To Be GivenBy Trio Performance For Benefit Of Lockwood Memorial Scholarship Fund An entire Beethoven program will be presented by Prof. Joseph Brink- man, pianist of the noted music school trio, in the first of a series of concerts benefiting the Albert Lock- wood Memorial Scholarship Fund at 8:15 p.m. today in Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. The scholarship fund which is a memorial to the late Dr. Albert Lock- wood, is designed to bring superior musical talent to the University, and the concert series which bears his name will introduce a number of local and foreign artists of note to the Ann Arbor music-loving public. In addition to funds received from the series which will be inaugurated tonight by Professor Brinkman, the general scholarship fund is being in- augurated by private contributions. The committee in charge of the Lockwood Fund includes Prof. Wil- loughby Boughton of the Detroit In- stitute of Arts, Professors James Glo- ver, Otto Stahl, Peter Okkelberg, Wal- ter Colby, and Morris Tilly of the University faculty and Vice-President Shirley W. Smith. Officers Are Elected By Delta Sigma Rho The students who will serve as of- ficers of Delta Sigma Rho, national honorary speech society, were elected at the annual initiation banquet held Police Action Necessary In Red Disorders May Day Demonstrations Broken Up With Few Casualties Communists March On French Capital Tear Gas Bombs Used To Disperse Paraders In Havana (By Associated Press) World wide celebration of May Day brought disorder, bloodshed, riots, and milder demonstrations despite careful police precautions. Shootings occurred in the United States, Cuba, and Austria that claimed casualties. A short-lived riot broke out after a Communist mass meeting near Paris, where 1,500 feds sought to march on the capital. Fresh disorders broke out at mid- night Tuesday in Paris when Com- munists entrenched themselves in a workers' quarter and opened fire on police with bullets and missiles. At Lake Charles, La., one man was seriously hurt when 15 shots were fired into a meeting of 300 persons gathered to discuss the longshore strike situation. Communists were held responsible for the burning of the famous Singer Hall in Augsburg, Germany, scene of Adolf Hitler's early attempt to raise a following. In Havana, bullets fired from housetops into a parade of 10,000 Communists killed one man and wounded six others, and created a bedlam while authorities used tear gas guns and the marchers scurried for shelter. Communists accused ABC secret society members of firing the shots; police declared Commun- ists had done so to provoke disorder. In many places military and po- lice chiefs had girded themselves for disorders in view of fiery manifestos and alleged revolutionary plots. In these localities the day. passed com- parativel .Qu-etly This is how the world observed the day: OVIEDO, Spain - Eleven were in- jured when civil guards charged into rioting Socialists and Communists. PARIS -- Red flags were much in evidence; a scheduled Communist- sponsored general strike hampered normal service but little; clashes be- tween manifestants and police in the suburbs resulted in arrests, but 10,- 000 soldiers and 30,000 police had lit- tle to do. VIENNA -- One Communist was reported killed near Nuerzuschlag by a member of a motorcycle troop of 170 Fascists from Italy en route to Vienna to participate in celebrations. BRIDGEPORT, Conn.-A Red flag flew over the City Hall of this Social- ist-controlled community, but not for long. BERLIN - The high point of Ger- many's "day of labor" was the speech of Chancellor Adolf Hitler, in which he told 2,000,000 workers that the will of the German people has proved stronger than the distress which be- set them in post-war days. NEW YORK - Communists and Socialists, carefully kept apart by 1,500 policemen, paraded and heard their orators call for discipline. MOSCOW - A military display of picked troops, 600 tanks, and air- planes marked the Russian May Day. WHITE MAY DAY TAHOE CITY, Calif., May 1. -WP) - Ten inches of snow made a white May Day here after many weeks of summer-like weather. Blooming wild- flowers and aspen trees, which budded a month earlier than usual, were frozen., Radicals Meet DetroitPolice In Near-Rtiot Proposed Workers' And Students' Parade Turns into One-Truck Affair Officers Use Clubs On'Demonstrators' Members Of Party Have To Hitch-Hike Back To Ann Arbor By PAUL J. ELLIOTT Student radicals who went to De- troit to take part in the annual May Day demonstration yesterday and, in- cidentally, to show "solidarity with the workers," met with a rude shock when the "workers" failed to put in an appearance and left the students to conduct an impromptu one-truck parade of the downtown district amid thousands of pedestrians and police. The demonstration ended with a police escort to the riverside dis- trict, where the patrolmen forced the party to leave the truck and disband. Hitch-Hike Back With their means of transportation' gone, members of the party who did ] not wait for the recovery of the truck were forced to hitch-hike their 5.-'; back to Ann Arbor, where another May Day meeting was scheduled to1 be held last night, with A. B. Magill9 of Detroit, editor of the Auto Workers' News, the speaker. Mr. Magill did not appear, and neither did many of hisE prospective audience.E Organized as only a part of thet main Detroit May Day celebration, the student demonstration was the high spot of the afternoon for hun- dreds of police who thronged Grand Circus park in downtown Detroit. The students left Ann Arbor at noon yesterday, intending to meet at Clark Park, Detroit, with members of theI Young Communists' Party of Detroit, They were greeted at Clark Park by a detachment of police who ordered Cheyfitz Is Leader Edward T. Cheyfitz, '34, of the Na- tional Student League, was ostensiblyI in charge of the trip, while the truck1 was driven by the Rev. Alfred LeeI Klaer, student pastor of the First1 Presbyterian Church of Ann Arbor. Cheyfitz protested to the police in- spector that as peaceable students1 they had a legal right to meet in the1 park, but the inspector, under the be- lief that the demonstrators were at group of Toledo Communists; ordered them to "go south." Cheyfitz then had the group pro-f ceed downtown, hoping to meet fellow demonstrators there. And downtown went 35 student "protesters," sing- ing the "Internationale," Communist anthem, and giving lusty cheers for1 the "workers," with an occasional in-k terpolation of "The Victors." Cheer Workers The students came forth with a "Yea, Workers!" and the crowd cheered appreciatively. The police kept hold of their nightsticks. Motorcycle police swung around the truck, and the officer in charge or- dered Mr. Klaer to proceed down Woodward. The presence of 10 po- lice gave emphasis to the command. After following their escort down to the riverside district, the students1 were rudely surprised when the police peremptorily ordered them from the truck. When they failed to get off as quickly as desired, Kendall Wood, '34, president of the Vanguard Club, and Charles A. Orr, instructor in the eco- nomics department, were struck with blackjacks. Mr. Klaer, who told po- lice that he was only the driver, was subjected to a personal search. Fail To Take Action On Substitute For Swingout Because the Undergraduate Council's proposal for a Swingout substitute was 'not presented to the office of Dean Joseph E. Bur- sley until yesterday afternoon, there was no time to hold a meet- ing of the Senate Committee on Student Affairs, it was stated yes- terday. No immediate meeting has been scheduled, Dean Bursley said last night, although there will be some informal discussion among one or two of the committee members to- day. The Council proposal calls for a march around the campus terminating in a sing before the Main Library. It is offered as a substitute for the traditional Swingout function which was re- cently abolished by the Senate Committee. Dillinger Hunt Amain Centers About St. Paul Bullet-Riddled Automobile Speeding Through City Renews Search CHICAGO, May 1. - UP)- While a close search was kept up for John Dillinger in Chicago, a bullet-riddled automobile reported to have been speeding through St. Paul today caused the eyes of the nationwide Dil- linger hunt to be centered once more in the Minnesota city. The sparsity of Dillinger reports led authorities here to believe that either the desperado and his follow- ers had holed up some place or that the hysteria which followed the sen- sational escape of the Dillinger gang from a Federal police trap at Little Bohemia, Wis., had subsided.; The bullet-pierced car was reported+ about the time Federal Judge M. M. Joyce was reducing from $50,000 to $20,000 the bill of Dr. Clayton May, Minneapolis physician, and his nurse, Mrs. Augusta Salt, held on FederalI charges of harboring Dillinger. The doctor and nurse were accused Yof havng treaed'Dilllingr fbr gln- shot wounds in the leg sustained in1 a battle with Federal agents in a St. Paul apartment March 31. The doctor has asserted that he was kidnapped, held prisoner for four days, and forced to treat the-wounded bandit chief. The car which aroused the suspicion1 of St. Paul police was a gray Stude- baker sedan with a Minnesota license. It had bullet holes in the windshield, the rear window and the left portion of the body. At San Antonio, meanwhile Fed-. eral agents said George "Baby Face" Nelson, Dillinger killer, had been posi- tively identified as the "Jimmy Wil- liams" to whom H. L. Lebman, Texas gunsmith, shipped five machine guns last October. The weapons were sent1 to Minneapolis. Average Greek To Be Panned In Next IssueiOfGargoyle A composite of fraternity presi-.. dents or, as Gargoyle editors them- selves put it, the average Greek will be the principal object of ridicule in the new issue of the Gargoyle which will appear on the campus tomorrow morning. The editors have assembled all the virtues and faults of the presidents of various Greek letter tongs on the campus and constructed the ideal president, which they will submit for the approval of the campus. Another feature of the issue will be a complete description of Ann Ar- bor's Beer Gardens. This emporium, No. 2 in the series, is Davenport's on W. Huron St. Also included in the pe- riodical is a new band, Ozzie Nelson of New York, to be featured in the Modern Music department, a discus- sion of Preposterous Person No. 13, and advice on what the well-dressed collegian will wear from four more clothes horses. Ballots Sealed After Vote On Council Offiee The name of the candidate who was elected secretary-treasurer of the Interfraternity Council last night ,by the Judiciary Committee will not be divulged until the council meets to Varsity Wins Over State In Opener, 13-3 Wolverines' Hitting And Spartans' Poor Fielding Feature Of Game Patchin And Artz Stars Of Victory Coach Fischer And Team Rejoice In Revenge Of Last Year's Defeat By CHARLES BAIRD Two big innings, featured by Mich- igan's hitting strength and Michigan State's poor fielding, accounted for the Wolverines' rout of the Spartans, 13 to 3, in the opening baseball game of the season here yesterday. So Coach Ray Fischer and his boys are rejoicing in sweet revenge for State's defeat in the opener last year. Two wearers of the Maize and Blue, Art Patchin and Avon Artz, were re- sponsible, to a great extent, for Mich- igan's excellent showing. Patchin went the full nine innings on the mound for the Wolverines, allowing only five scattered hits, and Artz starred on the offense hitting safely on the five occasions when he faced State hurlers. Wolverines Bunch Hits Michigan's batters, going on a hit- ting spree, knocked two Spartan pitchers out of the box and badly mutilated the, third. There was no The box score and play-by-play account of the Michigan-Mich- igan State game will -be found on page 3. stopping them. Fifteen hits, bunched conveniently, spelled State's Waterloo and gave the Wolverines one of the most satisfying victories in years. Kronbaclh was the first Spartan pitcher to face the Michigan batsmen. He lasted just one and one-third in- nings. Berg followed him on the mound and did comparatively well until th Milhga's. evenh-inning barrage of hits sent him to the dug- out. Hopkins followed him and with difficulty finished the game. Score in Second, Seventh Michigan did all her scoring in the second and lucky seventh innings. Four hits by Waterbor, Artz, Paulson and Regeczi, two walks and three er- rors accounted for seven Wolverine runs in the second inning. Those scor- ing were Paulson, Chapman, Patchin, Waterbor, Oliver, Artz and Wistert. The Spartans did their only scoring in the sixth frame when they com- bined a walk and two hits to push three runs over the plate. Six More Come In Michigan, however, came back in the next inning to score six more runs and put the game on ice. Six hits, a walk, a sacrifice, and an error tell the story. The game took on the ap- pearance of a track meet when Paul- son, Regeczi, Chapman, Patchin, 01- iver and Petoskey crossed the platter in succession. Although Berg of State struck out seven Michigan batsmen, he allowed 10 hits, and issued three free passes. Patchin was credited with only four strike-outs, but he had the Spartans in hand at all times with the excep- tion of the third inning. The game was played to a sizeable crowd of enthusiastic rooters and lasted until 6:30 p.m. The Brones' To Open Toa In Milwaukee The first production in America of Alfred Sangster's London success, "The Brontes" will be presented at the matinee and evening perform- ances today before Milwaukee audi- ences in the Pabst Theatre there, as one of the dramatic attractions of Milwaukee Season, under the direc- tion of Robert Henderson. "The Brontes," a story centering around the illustrious Charlotte, Emily, and Anne Bronte, will open the 1934 Dramatic Season in Ann Ar- bor in two weeks, May 14, and will run seven performances through May 18. It was announced yesterday that Katherine Wick Kelly, leading lady of the Cleveland Playhouse, has been engaged for the role of Mistress Knight with Madame Eugenie Leonto- vich and Rollo Peters in "And So To Bed," the second production of the "If we have dispensed with many yards of gold braid in our early ad- ministration of the Philippine Islands in the form of rank and honorary po- sitions, there would have been no clamor for independence," stated Prof. Harvey Rohrer of the political science department, former trade commissioner in the islands, in dis- cussing "The Political and Economic Conditions of the Philippines" before a meeting of the International Rela- tions Club last night. People in the Islands want pres- tige; they want one of thir own race to be nominal head of this govern- ment, said Professor Rohrer. "We gave them efficiency not display," he con- tinued. A large percentage of the pop- ulation may be classed as backward, he explained, and if we had spent more time developing Philippine cul- ture we would be better off. The Islands are of value to us, he said, economically being a not insig- nificant market; the economic advan- tages far outweigh the disadvantages except to a certain small prejudiced group. The Philippines have their in- dependence now, conditionally for a transition period of ten years, plus the probable two years in which they S # t tt 3 q J E I l i i f 2 S Weaver Praises Comedy Club's Choice Of Hop wood Prize Play "I have been delighted to learn that Comedy Club has decided to present a Hopwood play for its spring production this year," Professor Ben- nett Weaver of the English depart- Iment said yesterday, commenting on the play by Vincent Wall, Grad., which is to be presented tomorrow, Friday, and Saturday nights at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. "In 'Little Love'," Professor Wea- ver said, "are combined with almost a professional touch the qualities which today's younger generation seem to desire in their dramatic fare: it is sophisticated, moves rapidly, and successful, it is to be taken to Broad- way. The production of "Little Love" by Comedy Club marks the first time that a Hopwood play has been given commercially. Discussing this origin- ality of production Professor Weaver said, "I, along with many others who are vitally interested in the theatre, have for some time felt that more attention should be given to new drama - particularly to our Hopwood drama. "I appreciate fully," Professor Wea- ver said, "the dangers and the risks involved in pioneering a show, and I think Comedy Club is to be praised w w i