The Weather Fair and cold tixlay; tomor- row increasing cloudiness and warmer. f iga 4:Iati Editorials Pickem Pool Passes Onr The Class Election Farce . . ... VOL. XLV. No. 34 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1934 PRICE FIVE CENTS E I PRICE FIVE CENTS Fifth Meeting Of Education Group Today Enrollment, Conferences, Addresses, Will Feature OpeningSession Tax Amendment To Be Subject Of Talk Nome And Community To Be Discussed By Child Study Director Enrollment of members, confer- ences, and addresses will feature the bpening session today of the fifth annual Parent Education Institute, which is convening here for a session to continue through Saturday. Chairman Of FERA Committee Defends Public Works Projects Commenting in regard to the recent attack by the Detroit Free Press on the FERA public works projects now underway in Washtenaw County, Prof. Lewis W. Gram, chairman of the Uni- versity FERA committee, said yester- day that as far as the University proj- ects, which cover a considerable por- tion of the entire county relief work, are concerned, all have proved to be well-conceived, sound in construc- tion, and efficiently administered. Denies Charges The charges made by the Detroit1 Free Press Tuesday stated that "Washtenaw finds much of its distress arising from an ill-conceived public works program," and continued to cite the Ann Arbor High auditorium proj- ect as an "example of bungling" and "a relief job proving dangerous to lives as well as proving expensive." In replying to these charges Pro-, fessor Gram said that the important part taken by the University in the county's "ill-conceived" public works program has resulted in large sav- ings to the operating costs of the ample of the University's relief works in the power substation that has been constructed adjacent to the Uni- versity to supplant the transformers formerly located in the basement of the Hospital. This FERA project, Pro- fessor Gram stated, has proved to be a "relief job proving a safeguard to lives, and has considerably econo- mized the electrical operating cost of the Hospital." Many Projects Completed Among other projects that have been completed under FERA and CWA finances have been the extension of electrical servicing by the University power plant to the Ferry Field ath- letic buildings and stadium, the con- struction of a low-pressure heating tunnel leading from the central heat- ing system to the architectural school and to the University high, and the addition of some 600,000 square feet to the area of the basement floor of the East Engineering building. In each of these projects, Professor Gram said, there has been no evi- dences of waste, faulty construction, or poor administration. "There can be little cause for criticism against any or all of the FERA projects con- nected with the University." Tibbett Sings Tonight For Choral Union Program Marks The Fifth Appearance Of Popular Artist In Ann Arbor Personality Makes Star Great Favorite To Sing Excerpts 'Emperor Jones,' Known Opera From Well Prominent speakers on today's pro- University and extensive additions to gram include Dr. W. D. Henderson, the value of the University's educa- director of the extension division, tional facilities. Mrs. D. W. Stewart, president of Professor Gram cited a typical ex- the Michigan Congress of Parents' and Teachers, and Dr. LeRoy E. Bow-" man of the Child Study Association Qun-te te ters of America. Dr. Henderson and Mrs. Stewart Traced Here will give the opening addresses of the institute at 10 a.m. in the Uni- versity High School Auditorium. U S. Detectives Addresses Meeting Tonight Dr. Bowman will address a meeting at 7:30 p.m. in the Lydia Mendelssohn Over $175 Passed Since Theatre on "The Home and the Com- Illinois-Michigan Game munity." Mrs. Stewart will address the same meeting and will explain Last Saturday the Parent and Teachers' stand on the tax amendments to be voted on With approximately $200 in coun- in Tuesday's election, particularly the terfeit bills circulated in Ann Arbor weight tax amendment. Arrange- since last Saturday, United States ments will be made for an inter- mission at this meeting for those who secret service men from Detroit have wish to attend the Lawrence Tibbett begun an intensive search for the Every Good Team Ought To Have At Least One Of These WASHINGTON; Oct. 31. - (P) - Huey P. Long's gridiron argosy to Nashville last week has brought him into demand as a football crowd- getter. George Washington University, which meets' Huey's 9thletes, Louis- iana State University's Tigers, here on Nov. 10, wants the Kingfish to come along and beat the tomtoms for the ball game.t With the plump and hilarious sen- ator twirling the baton, Louisiana rode into Tennessee last week, attract-' ed a huge bunch of fans, and elim- inated Vanderbilt from the unbeaten ranks, pouring on the touchdowns for a 29 to 0 victory. Both unbeaten, George Washington and Louisiana are sure to draw a good "house" ten days hence. But with the Kingfish as an added attraction, Lawrence Tibbett, the spectacular American operatic star who has won popular acclaim never before accorded to a baritone, will give the second concert of the Choral Union series atj 8:15 p.m. today in Hill Auditorium. Mr. Tibbett's appearancetonightl will be his fifth in Ann Arbor, as he has been heard three, times as a May Festival soloist and once before on the Choral Union series. His Ann Arbor debut was made in the Fes- tival of 1925 with outstandng suc- cess, and successive appearances in 1927, 1929, and 1932 saw him triumph- ant among local music-lovers. Program Is Attractive The program which he has prepared for tonight's concert has been termed "particularly attractive," including among the various numbers excerpts from the famous opera, "Emperor Jones" which has commanded such; universal attention. Mr. Tibbett, like Rosa Ponselle, who opened the series last week, is known for an outstanding personality. He is endeared to audiences throughout the country, primarily because his name and fame are "American made." Since his first great triumph at the Metro- politan Opera House, his fame has mounted to where he is snow the out- standing male singer of the country in popularity. Star Is Versatile His work is not confined to the operatic stage, for Mr. 'TIibbett is as well known as a star of the concert stage, the motion pictures, and the radio. U.Of C..Action Incurs Wrath Of Collegians Suspension Of Five For Alleged Radical Activity Brings Much Criticismn Official Defends His Ruling In Statement Three Hundred Students Vote In Favor Of One. Hour Protest Strike SAN FRANCISCO, Calif., Oct. 31--, (P-Collegians at Stanford and Cali- fornia universities fumed today against the suspension of five stu- dents at the University of California at Los Angeles for alleged radical activity. Three hundred of the 12,000 en- rolled at the University of California in Berkeley voted in favor of a one-t hour protest strike unless the five; are reinstated. Some Stanfordites circulated a protest petition and the Stanford Daily printed an editorial berating the U.C.L.A. faculty's atti- tude. Provost Ernest C. Moore of the U.C.L.A. said the agitation resolved into the question who was running the University. Defends His Suspension He defended his suspensions with the assertion his campus was a "hot- bed of communism," and added it was a question "whether the consti- tuted authorities should run the uni- versity or whether we should turn it over to the control of an unorganized group of communists." The mass meeting at Berkeley hoot- ed his stand as against the right of student self - government.mThey threatened to smash the camera of] a photographer who said he had been hired by the University Buildings and Grounds Department to take pictures of the gathering. Photographer Is Released The photographer was released un- disturbed after cooler heads had argued against violence.e The Daily Californian, Berkeley! c a m p u s publication, questionedt whether "any five students in anyi university could have power and in-z fluence to 'use their offices to destroy the university by handing it over to1 the communists.' If that condition actually prevails at U.C.L.A. - well, it must be an awfully queer campus."r From the Stanford Daily came the editorial charge that the wholet trouble was engendered by state poli-c tics and that the university authori- ties sought to prevent "an open forum discussion of the state election." "What are they trying to turn out1 as graduates - gentlemen and intelli- gent citizens or plain nincompoops?" the editorial demanded. r Washtenaw Party Sweeps Senior Lit 'Posts In Election Concert at 8:15 in Hill Auditorium. At 11 a.m. Mrs. Pauline Wilson will conduct a Family Consultation Service at the Merrill-Palmer School. Dr. C. A. Fisher, assistant director of the University extension division, will. address a 1:30 p.m. meeting in University High School Auditorium. The topic of his talk will be "Toward a Program of Adult Education in Your Community." To Hold Conference group which passed $75 bogus money at the Illinois-Michigan game and more than $100 to local merchantsa since then. Harry Tillotson, ticket manager for the Board in Control of Physical Edu- cation,. reported to government oper- atives that six ten dollar and three five dollar bills were discovered to be bogus by employes of the board en- gaged in checking the money. One{ bill was refused by a ticket-seller, Uncertain Gunman, Timid Frosh Stage A Double Retreat A startled, panting freshman pledge darted into the Sigma' Phi house Monday night, to tell the elder broth- ers of a light scrimmage he had just undergone with a would-be bandit. When Richard Kendrick, '38, on his way home from the house about 11 p.m. was walking up Catherine St. in the vicinity of the hospital, a man waving a gun stepped from the shadows with a command to "stick 'em up." Kendrick, still shivering from a tubbing he had just received, was a bit slow in raising his arms, and the bandit, taking this for a sign of resistance, threw a punch at his victim with his free hand, but missed. Kendrick, seeing an opening, came right back with a long, vigorous left, and the bandit turned and ran. Tak- ing the opportunity for a little warm- ing up, the freshman laid the bandit low with a flying tackle, jarring the latter's gun from his hand. The bandit recovered and set out at a terrific speed; Kendrick set out with even greater speed, but in the opposite direction. Equal Chance In Education Plea OfGroup Emergency Commission Plans To Help Children During Depression That equal educational opportun- ity for all the childien in the nation shall not be periled during the pres- ent financial exigency is the primary purpose of the Joint Commission On the Emergency in Education, accord- ing to resolutions adopted at its recent meeting in Chicago. The Joint Commission was ap- pointed by the National Education Association and the Department of Superintendence. Dean James B. Ed- monson of the school of education, was among the leaders in educa- tional fields chosen for service on the committee. Appraisal of the present education- al methods and curriculums to en- able the schools to meet new needs presented by a changing social, in- dustrial, and economic order is stated as the secondary purpose of the com- mission. Among the subjects considered at the recent Chicago meeting were: Federal government aid to schools, the effects of the drought on the schools, and anticipated school legis- lation. From leaders in education and child welfare, 860 consultants have been chosen from all parts of the United States to act as advisers to the mem- bers of the Commission. DEFENDANTS ARE OVERRULED CHICAGO, Oct. 31.- (RP) -Federal Judge James H. Wilkerson today over- ruled motions for directed verdicts of not guilty filed in behalf of 15 mail fraud trial co-defendants of Samuel Insull and his son, Samuel, Jr. George Washington envisions a sell- Individual tickets fr tonight's con- out and perhaps an all-time high cert will be on sale at the box office for capital contests. in Hill Auditorium. They are priced! What with Georgia reportedly of- at $1, $1.50, and $2 each. Some sea- fering Louisiana a game next fall "if son tickets are still available for the they bring Huey along" and George remainder of the series including the At 3:15 p.m. there will be two con- and this is believed to have givenf ferences in University High School. the money-passers warning. Mrs. Stewart will lead the one on During this week all four local; "The Part the Home Should Play in banks report the receipt of the coun- Parent Education, and Dr. Ralph C. terfeit bills, chiefly in deposits made McAfee, executive secretary of the by business houses. All the fake bills! Detroit Council of Churches, will ex- were of five and ten dollar denomina- plain "The Purpose and Program-'of tions. the Legion of Decency." Describing the counterfeiters' work, . Alfred F. Staeb, cashier of the Ann The Parent Education Institute is Arbor Savings Bank, said yesterday sponsored .by the extension division that the five's were poor imitations of the University, the Michigan Con- but that the ten's were much harder gress of Parents and Teachers, and bt t en s erfes m the School of Education. to identify as counterfeits. Herman F. Gross, cashier of the The enrollment fee for the institute State Savings Bank, further describ- this year is $1 for the entire three ed the bills. He said that the one days or 50 cents for one day or a ten dollar bill which his bank had; single session. The meeting tonight received seemed as if "it had been at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre put through the wash." He did not a panel discussion that will be held suggest any other means of identifi- on Friday, and the luncheon on Sat- cation, although he said there was urday noon, when Dr. Paul F. Voelk- an unofficial report that all the coun- er, State superintendent of public in- terfeit bills had the same serial num- struction, will speak, are all open to ber.j Washington clamoring for ence, Long has made quick an apprentice in his new field. his pres- strides as collegiate Opera Tryouts To ReportThis Week Further tryouts for committee posi- Tibbett performance. They are priced at $5, $7, and $8.50 and may be pro-! cured at the School of Music, Maynard Street. The third concert, to be given on Nov. 19, will feature the Don Cossack Russian Male Chorus, consisting of 36 expatriated officers of the Russian Imperial army, known as the "Horse- men of the Steppes."j New Deal Party Takes All Engineering School Senior Positions Orvil Aronson Wins In Business School Independents Seize Slim Medical School Majority In Close Ballot Polling more than 200 votes, the candidates of the Washtenaw-Coali- tion party yesterday were elected to all four positions in the senior class literary college election by a landslide majority over the State Street-Cam- pus Coalition faction. George Lawton, Trigon and Wash- tenaw party presidential candidate, was accorded the most one-sided ma- jority on record over Alfred Plummer, Phi Gamma Delta and State Street nominee. The vote was 243 to 67. The Washtenaw candidates for the vice-presidency and secretaryship, Margaret Mustard, Pi Beta Phi, and Marion Bertsch, Martha Cook inde- pendent, respectively, were unopposed when the women named by the State Street party withdrew from the elec- tion. Shaw Is Secretary The position of class treasurer went to Lee C. Shaw, Phi Delta Theta, by a margin of 242 to 68. He was opposed by Frederick Jones, Phi Sigma Kappa. In the engineering college, the New Deal party placed all five of its can- didates in office. However, in no case was there a margin of more than 22 votes between the nominees. Sam Tra- montana, Phi Kappa, at the head of the New Deal ticket, was elected pres- ident by a margin of 77 to 60 over Charles Weinfeld, Phi Epsilon Pi. Julius F. Bartus, Frank DuLyn, Robert Phohman, and Joseph Wagner were chosen for the positions of vice- president, secretary, treasurer, and honor council member, respectively. Aronson Is Elected The eight seniors who balloted in the business administration school voted unanimously to elect Orvil Ar- onson to the class presidency, Robert Shaw to the vice-presidency, Louis Klass to the secretaryship, and Robert Allmand to the treasurer's position. An unusually heavy vote was cast in the law school elections with Wil- liam Babcock winning the presidency by a margin of five votes over Rich- ard Angell. Babcock polled 58 votes. Herbert A. Milliken gathered the largest margin in the balloting for the vice-presidency when he defeated John Piester by a count of 66 to 30. Ellsworth Allison and Milton J Mil- ler were elected to the secretaryship and treasurer's position, respectively, over Evelyn Nielson and Leonard Weiner. Independents Successful The independent ticket won the medical school election by a slim ma- jority with William B. Taylor, presi- dential candidate, being placed in of- fice by a margin of 10 votes. Sol Baker was chosen to the vice-presidency, Marcus Weiner to the secretaryship, and Mark S. -Donovan to the treas- urer's post. This was the first time in twenty years that the independents in a sen- ior medical class organized a ticket and elected it over a strongly organ- ized fraternity group. Merrill W. Michels and Edwin R. McKnight were elected to the honor council. The senior class in the dental school unanimously elected Bruce Fuller, president, Jan K. Frowing, vice-presi- dent, Dwight A. Jackson, secretary, and Bernard Weintraub, treasurer. Carl Hilty, '35, president of the Undergraduate Council, announced last night that senior classes in other schools and colleges may hold an election at a later date by petition- ing the Council. All such petitions must have at least ten signatures, Hilty stated. The junior classes in all schools and colleges will elect their officers Wed- nesday. Alpha Nu Debaters Hear Court Topic The negative team was awarded victory by Alpha Nu members yes tions and, parts in the cast of the NSL M eeting Is 26th annual Michigan Union operai to be presented Dec. 10 to 15 in the IAddressed Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre will be By the public. Federal Wages Will Be Raised, Says Roosevelt Predict Rise In Prices As Result Of The Levelling Effort By President WASHINGTON, Oct. 31.- (P) - An administration determination to lift prices and values higher during the next eight months was evidenced to- day in a presidential decree that gov- ernment salaries would be restored to the pre-depression level by next July 1. Mr. Roosevelt, making known his intention at his semi-weekly press conference, revealed that the budget for the new fiscal year would include funds for replacing the last five per- cent of the 15 that this administration lopped off of federal salaries. The cost of living will be high enough by July 1, when the next fiscal year begins, to justify the salary in- crease, the President declared. He does not expect it to be high enough by the end of this year to warrant the }roost. Payments Not Yet Made By Pool Representative Late last night no payment had been made by the Ann Arbor repre- sentative of the Pickem Pool who had previously announced that because of the default in the bet payments, the money which had been put up would be refunded. Efforts have been made to contact the Cleveland offices of the organiza- tion, but as yet these have been un- successful. conducted today and tomorrow, ac- cording to Russell McCracken, di- rector of the. show. All students interested in parts in the show or committee positions are asked to report from 3 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. today or from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. tomorrow in Room 316 and 320 of 1 the Union. The cast tryouts will be divided into groups of dancers and singers, according to McCracken. Those who are interested in singing parts are asked to bring music for demonstra- tion purposes, while students trying' out for speaking parts will be re- quested to read some manuscript of their own choice. Approximately 50 students reported for tryouts yesterday. It was empha- sized that four times that number will be required to fill all the cast positions. I Prof. Meader! I Discuss Relationship'Of Economics And Recent Social Trends The relationship existing between, economic trends and scientific, relig- ious, and literary trends was dis- cussed last night by Prof. Clarence L. Meader, of the general linguistics de- partment, before a meeting of the National Student League in the Union. Professor Meader employed a chart marked with vertical colored strips of varying widths to illustrate the rela- tive expansion and contraction of hu- man activity under these general di-I visions. In discussing the economic situa- tion, Professor Meader pointed out that the chart revealed a condition of concentrated wealth in the United States at the present time compar- able to thehcondition in Russia just before the Revolution. Developing the theme that econo- mics is the principle factor in the interdependent aspects -of life, Pro- fessor Meader continued by showing that along with the evolution of the present economic system has come a widening in the scope of science, a retreat of theology before the advance of ethics and rationality in religion, and a spurt, particularly in Russia, in the amount of literature dealing with the proletarian point of view. Russia, Professor Meader declared,, is the new leader in all cultural ac- tivities, since there the principle of Girls Can't Go Nude Lest Forests Flame (By Intercollegiate Press) SALT LAKE CITY, Utah, Oct. 31.- Fear of forest fires has made it nelces- sary to refuse nine Salt Lake City girls the right to go nude in the Saw- tooth National Forest of Idaho. The nine girls asked permission to occupy a camp site in the nude from M. S. Benedict, supervisor of the for- est. In explaining his refusal, he said: "Sawtooth days and nights are cold and the girls would have to build fires. The forest fire hazard would be too great." Negro Actor Has Played Role Of'DeLawd'For Many Years Number Of Foreign Students In University Has Increased Foreign student registration at the Porto Rico comes next with 13; the University has increased almost 15- Philippine Islands have 9; India 6; per cent this year, the aggregate fig- Turkey, 6; Hawaii, Germany, Eng- ure for this semester being 215 n- land each have 5; Korea, 4; Scotland, ureforths smeterbeng 15non- 3; Switzerland, Hungary, Iraq, Do- American students. The number of minican Republic and Japan, 2 each. foreign students last year was 187. The list of countries represented by These figures, obtained from ad- one student on the campus is: Al-' vance copies of the International Di- bania, Australia, Brazil, Cuba, Den- rectory, apply only to students who mark, France, Guatemala, Italy, Java, claim citizenship in another country, Panama, Persia, Poland, South Wales, not to those who were born abroad Sumatra, and the Union of South and who have become American cit- Africa. izens. A number of nationalities are pres- Unheralded by any golden trump- ets, not even followed by his retinue of pickaninny cherubs, "De Lawd"' arrived in Ann Arbor yesterday morn- I ing. For Richard B. Harrison, the, 72-year-old Negro actor who rose to thespian heights in "The Green Pastures," the performance last night marked his 1,534th enactment of the famous role. And though the last trumpet has blown for two Gabriels, and a Moses, and a Noah, and a high priest in the play have been gather- ed to their father, "de Lawd" still treads the boards in the character he made famous. Resembles A Patriarch Looking the part of a Biblical pa- triarch, white-headed and benevolent, the Mansfield theatre on Broadway, Feb. 26, 1930, Mr. Harrison has never missed a single performance. During that time the little angels, to whom he acts as father while the play is on, the road, have grown most prodig- iously big, and several have had to be replaced, Mr. Harrison relates that Connelly, the author, attending a rehearsal, listened for a moment to one cherub's supposedly soprano chirp, and remarked, "Gee, I guess you'll have to put him in the bass section of the choir." Mother Was Slave Mr. Harrison's mother was a slave in Missouri, and his father a slave in Kentucky. "They both ran away to Canada around 1854, and they met