Li ian ~Iai i Editorials Students Offered An Oppor- tunity To Vote; A Move Toward Justice For All. VOL XLIV No. 171 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, MAY 24, 1934 PRICE FIVE CENTS Gesell Gets Grant A $5,000 grant will be allocated to Dr. Gesell, head of the physiology de- partment for "research on the physi- ology of respiration." The General .Education Board, another Rockefeller fund, closely associated with the Foundation, has extended a grant of $150,000 voted in 1929 to run over a five-year period for "research in ad- vance of humanistic studies." This does not mean more funds, but that what is left of the original grant may be expended. This is being used by the University Institute of Archeolog- ical Research. The Institute, composed of professors from various depart- mentsi n the University, has used none of this money for excavations, but for publication of research books and the like. In addition to these, the Foundation also sanctioned continuation of $95,- 000, made in 1930 to run seven years, to the elementary school for the pur- pose of "research in methods of teach- ing and child care at the elementary school," House Passes Proposal For Arms Embargo Senate Approval Is Sought On Measure Designed To Halt Chaco War WASHINGTON, May 23.--VP) - President Roosevelt's request for au- thority to stop the sale of arms and munitions intended for the Gran Cha- co battlefields received expeditious treatment today from a Congress em- phatically in favor of the proposal. The House unanimously adopted a resolution empowering the President to declare an embargo as a means of ending the destructive and disastrous war between Bolivia and Paraguay that)has raged on the plains and in the jungles of the South American in- terior. Almost simtltaneously, the Senate Foreign Relations', Committee ap- proved a similar resolution, and Chairman Key Pittman made plans for obtaining Senate approval as soon as debate on the RA and the Tariff Bill permitted him to call the measure up for action: Under the leadership of Chairman S. D. McReynolds, of the House For- eign Affairs Committee, the resolu- tion was put through in 20 minutes. In the brief debate, Rep. Hamilton Fish, (Rep., N. Y.), voiced emphatic opposition to a pending resolution which would give the President au- Ormond E. Hunt, vice president of the General Motors Company, .will be the speaker at the Tung Oil Ban- quet to be held at 6:15 tonight in the Terrace Room of the Union. Mr. Hunt will speak on "Raw Stuff and Rivets". He graduated from Michi- gan in 1908 and has been with Gen- eral Motors since that time. Dean H. C. Sadler and C. W. Ditchy will be the other speakers. Mr. Ditchy of Detroit will present the Associate Technical Society awards to the winner at this banquet. The winner being George W. Malone '37E. The new officers, Eric E. Sommer '35E, vice president, S. M. Ferman '34E, treasurer, M. B. Heimann '36E recording secretary, and George W. Malone '37E home secretary will be inducted into office. Albert J. Stone '34E president-elect will not be able to attend because of illness. National Guard Called Out To Cheek Strikes Rioting Strikers In Ohio And Minnesota Assail Factories (By Associated Press) Rioting broke out yesterday on one strike front in Ohio, and in Minnea- polis national guardsmen were called to duty as a jittery citizenry feared possible duplication of previous dis- orders. Nearly 3,000 strike pickets and sym- pathizers at the Electric Auto-Lite Co. plant in Toledo held workers of the day shift virtual prisoners when a riot broke out suddenly with bullets spat- ting, bricks and stones tossed, and tear gas bombs hurled. National guardsmen - three regi- ments - were mobilized by Gov. Lloyd D. Olson's orders in Minneapolis as reports were current that striking truck drivers contemplated rejection of the regional labor board's decision on their wage demands. Strikers as- sembled for a mass meeting in the parade grounds. The city maret of Minneapolis, scene of rioting, which Monday and Tuesday took one life and sent scores to hospitals, was closed and the streets were empty save for a few policemen. Ohio Troops Called Out TOLEDO, May 23.-(VP)-Adju- tant-General Frank D. Henderson or- dered 700 Ohio national guardsmen into Toledo tonight around the elec- tric Auto-Lite Co. plant where 1,500 workers are held prisoners by 3,000 strikers and sympathizers. Shortly before General Henderson's order was given, company guards set up machine guns and trained them on a steel gate which the rioting strikers had torn from its hinges. A new shipment of tear gas bombs was received at nine o'clock tonight and police and deputies immediately began firing the bombs into the crowd of sympathizers. Several shots were heard.- The 1,500 workers in the plant pre- pared to sleep in the factory building EleetStudent Members Of Boards Today To Vote On Candidates For Publications And Athlet. ics Positions No Students Named To S.C.A. Positions Booths To Be Plaed In Engineering Arch And In Front OfLibrary Voting in the-Al-Campus elections to determine student members of the Board in Control of Athletics and the Board in Control of Student Pub- lications will begin at 9 a. m. today and continue until 4 p. m. this after- noon, it was announced by Allan D. McCombs, president of the Union. Union officials will be in charge of two booths on the campus, placed before the Main Library and at the entrance of the Engineering Arch. Eight candidates for student rep- resentation on the Board in Control of Student Publications have been nominated, of whom three will be elected: Willard E. Blazer, '35, Jack L. Efroymonson, '35, J. Carl Hilty, '35, O. Allen Knuusi, '35E, Herbert Leggett, '35, A. Colton Park, '35, Rob- ert .VanderKloot, '35, and George Van Vleck, '35. Three Students On Board The Board in Control ofaStudent Publications is composed of four faculty members, appointed by the president, and three students, nom- inated by the Board, and elected from the campus at large. It serves in a supervisory function to the four of- ficial student publications of the Uni- versity: The Daily, The 'Ensian, The Gargoyle, and The Student Direct- ory, A non-profit corporation, it also operates the printing shop in the Student Publications Building. An important function of the board is the appointment of the editors and business managers of the publica- tions. Two For Athletic Board Nelson R. Droulard, '36E, . and Frank B. Fehsenfeld, '36 were named as candidates for election to the Board in Control of Athletics. The Board in Control of Athletics is composed of 14 members: nine members of the faculty, three alumni, and two students. It supervises al University athletics, passing on the budget, drawing up schedules, and approvitig the appointments of coaches. The"vestigial" nature of student offices on the Board in Control of the Student C'ristian Association was cited by Russel F. Anderson, '36, pres- ident of the Student Christian Asso- ciation, as reason for omitting this year's appointment of candidates for those offices. Drew Seeks Injunction Against Band Practice A. Leslie Drew, '36, a member of the Zeta Psi fraternity, is consulting an attorney on the possibility of obtain- ing an injunction restraining the Band from practicing in Morris Hall. The Zeta Psi house and Morris Hall are separated only by a narrow drive, and Drew claims the constant racket of band practice is shattering his nerves and interfering with his prep- aration for final examinations. Drew said he would not mind so much if the Band would play during the practice but the constant "oop oop, of instruments being tuned is starting him on the way to a nervous breakdown. Planes- Finish Dash To Help, Sick Voyager LOS ANGELES, Calif., May 23.- (A) - Roaring across the equator, two navy planes from Coco Solo, C.Z., late today completed a 1,000 mile flight to Tagus Cove of the Galapagos Islands with medical aid for William Albert Robinson, Chicago millionaire, stricken with appendicitis. Safe landing of the planes at 3:45 p.m. (Pacific standard time) was re- ported by the Mackay Radio Corp. here in a message relayed from the lonely equatorial archipelago by a fishing trawler that for two days has been standing by the 32-foot, round the world ketch. on which the explorer Appointmen I For Summer DailyNamed Shaw Is Picked By Pettit For Assistant Managing Editorship Seven Appointed As Associate Editors Baird, Ruwitch, Groehn, Reed, Elliott, Conger, And Kleene Named Appointments of staff members for the 1934 Summer Michigan Daily were made last night by E. Jerome Pettit, '35, managing editor. Brackley Shaw, '34, Ann Arbor, was named to the position of assistant managing editor by Pettit. Shaw has been city editor of The Daily during the past year. He is a member of Sigma Phi fraternity, Druids, honor- ary literary society, and Sigma Delta Chi, national professional journalism society, of which organization he was formerly treasurer. Associate Editors Appointed Pettit appointed seven men to serve as associate editors on The Summer Daily. They are: Charles A. Baird, '35, Holly; Robert S. Ruwitch, '35, Highland Park, Ill.; Thomas E. Groehn, '36, Grosse Pointe; Paul- J. Elliott, '36, Wilkinsburg, Pa.; Thomas H. Kleene, '36, Ann Arbor, William R. Reed, '36, Ann Arbor; and Clinton Conger, '37, Ann Arbor. Students who will be attending the Summer Session and who are inter- ested in obtaining experience and training in newspaper work may apply at the editorial offices of The Daily, according to Pettit. Baird is a former sports assistant on The Daily. He is a member of Sigma Delta Chi. 4.uwitch is a night editor on The Daily. He is also a member of Sigma Delta Chi and Zeta Beta Tau fraternity. Groehn is also a Daily night editor. He is in Theta Delta Chi fraternity. Have Had Experience . Elliott is a-fight Viitor of The Daily. Kleene holds a like position, in addi- tion to being a member of Sphinx, honorary junior literary society, Sig- ma Delta Chi, Alpha Delta Phi fra- ternity, and the executive council of the Union. Reed is a sports assistant on The Daily and a member of Sigma Delta Chi. Conger is a Daily reporter and a member of Sigma Phi fraternity. COUncil Given Pulans To Solve Water Problem Water Commissioners Do Not Believe Alternative Forms Will Be Adopted Offering three possible solutions for Ann Arbor's water problem, the recommendation of the Board of Water Commissioners was presented, to the Common Council Monday night, in response to its request for an estimate of the proposed costs of a softening and filtering plant for systems using the present well supply and the Huron River as sources. The first possible project, a plant located adjacent to the existing re- servoir to treat the existing well sup- ply, would cost $485,000 for construc- tion, and would involve $92,250 in annual additional charges. Secondly, a plant is offered lo- cated on the Huron River near the Barton Dam to treat the water of the Huron River, at an estimated con- struction cost of $365,000, and involv- ing $61,750 in additional annual charges. The third possibility is a plant.lo- cated on the- Huron River near the Barton Dam to treat the existing well supply exclusive of the Steere Farm supply, and in addition the water from the Huron River to the extent that the same may be re- quired. It is estimated that such a plant will cost $403,000 for construc- tion, and will have $71,450 in addi- ,tional annual costs. Although the maximum pumping capacity for the present system is not over six million gallons daily, the proposed plans were offered on a ba- sis of nine million gallons per day. Reports and recommendations have been offered back and forth between the Council and the Board for 50 years. Little action is expected at oresent on the current renort. Lorado Taft, Famous Sculptor, Lauds Growth Of Michigan Art BY DOROTHY GIES High praise was sounded to the progress of art work at Michigan by Lorado Taft, world-famous sculp- tor, when he paid a flying visit to Ann Arbor yesterday. Returning to Chicago from an address before Ypsilanti State Normal students, Mr. Taft stopped at the University long enough to examine the sculpture pieces now, on exhibit at the League. Four years ago, at the Convention of the American Federation of Art in Washington, D. C., Mr. Taft spoke of the new development in sculpture work at the University of Michigan, stating that the movement bore watching in the art activities of the country. Yesterday, after observing the most recent pieces on exhibit, Mr. Taft- declared, "The work is even more surprising than I had expected, and I certainly compliment the students and Professor Avard Fairbanks for their success. The exhibit as a whole shows a remarkable degree of abil- ity." While he seemed to hesitate in speaking of individual pieces, Mr. Taft cited the work of Helen Bailey, grad, and Harry Furst, '35, as show- ing particular promise, He has at various times mentioned Prof. Fair- banks' "Head of a Crusader" as one of the finest he has ever seen done. White-haired, continental in, ap- pearance, and gracious of manner, Mr. Taft looks the part of the dis- tinguished artist. Born in Tllinois in 1860, he was educated at the Uni-' versity of Illinois and in Paris at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts. His most fa- mous work includes the Indian figure Blackhawk, a concrete statue of gi- gantic proportions, at Rock River, Ill., and the celebrated Columbus Memorial Fountain at Washington, D. C. In his address at Ypsilanti, Mr. Taft discussed lighting effects in sculpture, and also his favorite brain- child, a museum he has designed to contain casts of the best pieces of sculpture in the history of art. Michigan Gets Five In Ninth Beats Toledo Wolverines Win 5-3 In First Night Game; Held Scoreless 8 Innings TOLEDO, O., May 23. - (Special) -After being held to one hit for the first eight innings, Michigan's base- ball team drove five runs across the plate in the ninth inning last night to defeat Toledo University, 5 to 3. The game was the_ first one ever played under arc lights by a Michi- gan nine. Five singles, coupled with two walks in the last inning, ended Lippincott's dominance over the Wolverine bats- men, and brought in the winning runs. Petoskey and Paulson singled to start the inning, and Wittberg's walk filled the bases. After Regeczi had fanned, Waterbor drove out another single to score Petoskey and Paulson and put Wittberg on third, from where he scored when Chapman forced Waterbor at second. Lerner worked Lippincott for another walk. The fourth single of the inning, by Leonard pinch-hitting for Wilson, drove in Chapman with the winning run, and Artz added another with a drive which scored Lerner: Wilson and Patchin worked on the mound for the Wolverines and be- tween them held Toledo to eight hits. Lippincott, the Toledo pitcher, was invincible for the first eight innings, and five Toledo errors did little dam- age as far as Michigan scoring was concerned. The Ohioans, although they outhit the Wolverines, failed to bunch their blows with the same effectiveness, scoring one run in the seventh and adding two more in the eighth. Patch- in held them scoreless in the final inning after Wilson had left for a pinch-hitter. The artificial lights proved no han- dicap to the Michigan fielders, who recovered at least temporarily from their recent disastrous slump. The score by innings: Micliigain iw Braves Scalp 23 In Annutal Raid On__campus Listen to this tale of romance, Tale of Indian warriors bold- In the early moon of greenleaves Came they forth the stoic valiant; Forth they romped to paleface wigwam, Wigwam one of friend great chief, Paleface mighty among his kind; Came he forth to take their token Of the warpath they would tread, Then to the mighty oak of Tappan Dashed the screaming, yelling red- fnen; To the tree of Indian legend When the white man pale and trembling Stood around the mighty oak; Warriors choice of paleface nation, Choice of tribe to run the gaunt- let. Down .the warriors, painted de- mons, Swooped and caught their prey like eagles, Loud the war cry stirred the still- ness, As they seized their hapless cap- tives, Forth they bore them to their wig- wam There to torture at their pleasure There they are around the glowing bonfires Heard the words of mighty wis- dom, Smoked the pipe of peace and friendship. Thus there came to Michigamua: Thomas D. Austin, Taylor Drys- dale, George Y. Duffy, William G Ferris, Eric W. Hall, John C. Healey, Robert J. Henoch, J. Carl Hilty, Jo- seph E. Horak, Jr., John P. Jewell Allan D. McCombs, William J. Mc Fate, Russell D. Oliver, Alfred H. Plummer, Russell B. Read, John M. Regeczi, Robert J. Renner, John H t Sherf, Philip A. Singleton, Harvey H. Smith, Laurence D. Smith, Robert S. Ward, Douglas R. Welch. Helen Wright Wins In Poetry Reading Contest The annual University of Michigan Poetry Reading Contest sponsored by the Interpretive Arts Society, which was held last night in the University High School Auditorium, was won by Helen Wright, '35, Deland, Fla. Miss Wright was presented with a set of books titled "The Golden Treasury-of Irish Songs and Lyrics. Hubert Horn won second prize which was a volume of American poetry. Judges were Prof. Eich, Prof. Burk- lund, Prof. Walter, Dean Humphreys, and Prof. Talamon. Be Begun Abbott Treasurer Puts Data Into Hands Of Department Of stice Today Party Standing Is Being Questioned Aide To Abbott Resigns; Terwilliger Is Named As TemporaryChief WASHINGTON, May 23,- (k)- All evidence in the investigation of charges of political activity in the of- fice of Horatio J. Abbott, who resigned yesterday as collector of internal rev- enue at Detroit, will be turned over to the Justice Department by the treasury. The Treasury made this known to- day and announced simultaneously that John H. Tieghe, deputy collector at Detroit and George W. Woods, a revenue agent on furlough from the Detroit office, had been suspended. The Treasury action was announced after a conference in the office of Secretary Morgenthau attended by Woods, Assistant Secretary Stephen xibbons, Guy T. Helvering, commis- sioner of internal revenue, and other treasury officials. Abbott Gives Statement DETROIT, May 23. - VP)-Al- though Horatio J. Abbott returned from Washington today with the statement that his resignation as col- lector of internal revenue for the Michigan district had shorn him of none of his power in Democratic af- fairs, speculation was rife as to whether he would relinquish,' his mem- oership on the party's national corn- mittee. Abbott said he had been given his .hoice in Washington between retain- ng the collectorship and membership )n the national comnittee' in line with the administration's policy igainst mixing administrative and po- litical activities, and had chosen the :atter. He said he had no intention f resigning from the committee, but from Washington came dispatches ,aying that he might not long retain shat membership. Terwilliger Appointed John M. Terwilliger , a iassistant in Abbott's old office,received a ter- orary appointment as:acting collet- 'or today. One of his first acts was 'o accept the voluntary resignation of John J. Tieghe, a deputy whose solici- ;ation of a political contribution from ;he Packard Motor Car Co. is gen- rally believed to have precipitated Abbott's resignation. Abbott declared, however, that the ,harges of political activities against nembers of his staff had nothing to to with his retirement, and said he 3xpected to be asked to name his suc- 3essor. Among the possibilities mentioned were Martin R. Bradley, of Menom- I nee, speaker of the House; Lieut. 3ov. Allen E. Stebbings; parole Com- nissioner W. Alfred Debo; Arthur F. Lederle, assistant city attorney of De- Wroit, and Robert Rayburn, Alpena lumberman. British Curator To Talk On Old Bible Paprus H. Idrys Bell, keeper of the manu- scripts in the British Museum and a -ecognized authority on papyrology, Nill deliver a special Tniversity lee- ;.ure at 4:15 p. m. Thursday, June 14, an "The Codex Sinaiticus," oldest mnanuscript of the Bible.' He has long been acquainted with members of the faculty here because of his assistance and advice during -he time when the University was building up its own collection of Greek papyri. The Codex Sinaiticus has only recently been acquired by the British museum and is reputed to be one of the most celebrated manuscripts in the world. Mr. Bell is the author of numerous books and has also published several collections of papyri. He is being brought here under the auspices of the Carnegie Corp., and , in addition to delivering his lecture in Ann Ar- bor, will visit other libraries through- out the country and attend the con- Probe To R Michigan .....000 000 005-5 Toledo .......000 000 120-3 H 6 8 E 1 5 THIS SERGEANT NOT TOUGH Either the pacifists have been gain- ing some oft their ends, or the stories current about the toughness of ser- geants are mere myths. Sergeant Dewey G. Bonniewell of the military tactics department poured at a recent dance of the Scabbard and Blade at the Wash- tenaw Country Club. Lost And Found Finds Much Is Found, But Little Is Reclaimed These hot spring days are bringing heart-rending lamentations from the lost and found department of the University. With woe-begone feel- ings the members of that indispen- sible unit look over their domain, searching vainly for a single more cubic inch in which to store the mul- titudious articles that stray mysteri- ously from their owners. During the winter a super-abund- ance of perfectly good overcoats, gloves and scarves poured in. Then in the month of April, the quality of lost apparel changed to raincoats and umbrellas. but the quantity of the, of the divers articles failed to come in to reclaim their property. During the rainy season, if a per- son lost his raincoat he came into the department immediately, for it was very wet outside. But now, if someone loses his or her hat, or gloves, or scarf, life goes on just as safely, and perhaps more comfort- ably without them. The net result of this reclamation failure is a swarm of topcoats, hats, and other articles that come in and stay in; and also for the very wor- ried look on the faces of the attend- ants who are now beginning to won- I