'thne Weather Rain turning to snow flurries today; tomorrow unsettled and somewhat warmer. Y Sir igait ~Iat Edistorials Tears Fell On U.C.L.A. ... Challenge To a Favored Group ... VOL. XLV. No. 44 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1934 PRICE FIVE CENTS Program For Financial Aid Inaugurated Bo a r d Of Directors Of Alumni Association Puts Plan Into Effect System Originally Launched In 19271 Local Lonely Hearts' Bureau Organized; Co-eds At Premium Program Will Be Made Permanent Feature O f Alumni Activities A Ten-Year Program for financial aid to the University was inaugurated by the board of directors of the Alum- ni Association at a recent meeting. This plan makes permanent the Ten-Year Program of the alumni launched in 1927 by the late Elmer J. Ottaway, then president of the asso- ciation. Although the present program was launched by Mr. Ottaway on the eve of the depression, and though its planned activities were curtailed by resulting economic conditions, it suc- ceeded beyond expectation, and many of the projects adopted by various University Clubs at that time have gone through to completion. Took Many Forms These projects took many forms, some were gifts to the University in the form of money, others endowed lectureships, scholarships, and fel- lowships, still others gave collections of materials to various campus li- braries, museums, and laboratories . Under the new plan voted by the directors this program will be made a permanent feature of alumni activ- ity, and every ten years, starting in 1937 after the completion of the pres- ent, a new program will be launched. Celebration Planned After the completion of the ten year period there will be a Jubilee celebra- tion on campus, the first one to be held in 1937. This Jubilee and all succeeding ones will fall on a decen- nial anniveisary of the founding of the University. Participation by alumni in this pro- gram of aid to the University will be through University of Michigan Clubs, alumni classes, Alumnae Chapters, and individuals. Under the present plan each of these organizations or individuals will select a definite objective for each ten-year period with aid of University and alumni officials. The program will be under the di- rection of Emory J. Hyde, president of the Alumni Association, until the expiration of. his present term of of- fice. At that time a permanent Di- rector of the Michigan Alumni Ten- Year Program will be appointed. Restrictions On Export Of Gold Are Repealed By FLORENCE HARPER Gents, co-eds, are you lonely, date- less? So asks the newly founded campus agency which styles itself, "Cupid's Official Helper," and which' goes on to prescribe a remedy for the afore-mentioned sad state of affairs. For the small sum of 25 cents per date the Campus Date Bureau guar- antees to correct the lonely, dateless conditions though officials of the or- ganization state emphatically that satisfaction is not guaranteed. How- ever, the preference of clients are taken into consideration and every effort is made, according to the manager, to meet all requirements. "Cupid's Official Helper" is in real- ity a trinity made up of three under- classmen, all of them new on campus, who see this as their great contribu- tion to University life. They con- ceived the idea after reading about similar institutions in operation on other campuses, notably at North- western and Wisconsin, and after observing the great need for such an organization here. The scheme is so newly put into operation that it is impossible as yet to predict its degree of success. The preliminary ads were run in The Daily only last Thursday, and they elicited no immediate response, though an irate landlady reports approximately 25 telephone calls Saturday night while the owners and operators of the business were all out, perhaps carrying on a little practical investi- gation concerning the dating situa- Unfortunately, all the calls were from the "gents" addressed in the advertisement so that the young bus- iness men are considering taking a woman into partnershipin order to interest the weaker, and appar- ently shyer, sex. The plan is to keep on file a minute personal description of each client, and 9. list of the social activities in which he wishes to participate, to- gether with his preference as to the appearance and personality of his date. Needless to say, these files, when and if they come into existence, will be absolutely private. According to its originators, this will prove a sure-fire method of bring- ing kindred souls together. All that is needed now is a little co-operation from the feminine element --------------- Ne ro Says He Shot Lyons In Self-Defense Student Waylaid, Robbed A f t e r Protesting, Say Police Officers LOS ANGELES, Nov. 12.- (P) - Police Captain A, S. Bradley an- nounced late today that Russ Griffin, 19-year-old Negro, confessed he shot and killed Lawrence Leonard Lyons, 30, son of New York missionaries, claiming he did so in self defense. The body of Lyons was found early today in Little Harlem, Negro section of Los Angeles. Captain Bradley related that Grif- fin, alias George Johnson, told him he was walking home from a beer parlor armed with two pistols when he met Lyons and an argument started. Griffin recounted how Lyons wrested one of the guns from him and shot at him, the officer said. The negro youth assertedly de- scribed drawing his remaining gun and shooting Lyons in the forehead. Lyons, a graduate of Yale and Co-' lumbia, was the son of Dr. and Mrs. Willard Lyons, of New York, who re- cently made a survey of missions in the Far East for the Rockefeller Foun-' dation. He had been studying at the medical school of the University of California. Police reported Lyons had been playing bridge earlier. in the evening, and apparently was held up as he was driving alone in his car, and was forced by the two gunmen to drive to the Little Harlem district. There, instead of surrendering his wallet, he attempted to fight his captors, and the fatal shooting followed. Michigamua Takes T. HawleyTapping T. Hawley Tapping, '16L, general secretary of the Alumni Association, was initiated into Michigamua, sen- ior honorary society, Sunday night. Mr. Tapping was prominent in campus activities while in the law school. He was a member of the Acacia fraternity, Sigma Delta Chi, Griffins, Toastmasters, Craftsmen, Owls, Archons, Treasurer of the Ath- letic Association, a member of the staff of The Michigan Daily, a mem- ber of the Board in Control of Stu- dent Publications, Board in Control of Athletics, Sports Editor of The Michigan Alumnus, Athletic Editor of the 1916 Michiganensian and pub- licity manager of the Athletic Asso- ciation. Arizona State Troops Move On River Site, 'This Is Our Last Stand,' Gov. Moeur Tells Troops In PublicMessage PHOENIX, Ariz., Nov. 12. - (P) - Commanded to "repel an invasion" of Arizona's rights. National Guardsmen today were mobilized and ordered by Gov. B. B. Moeur to proceed imme- diately to the site of the Parker dam to prevent any construction work on the Arizona side of the Colorado River. The mobilization was ordered when Gov. Moeur failed to hear from Wash- ington that work on the Federal proj- ect had been held up pending settle- ment of Arizona's claims. A zone on the Arizona side of the dam site, where a pile bridge is being constructed preparatory to actual work on the dam, was placed under' martial law Saturday by Governor Moeur. Ickes Deprecates Move In Washington, Harold Ickes, sec- retary of the interior, said that he. could "see no reason for the Arizona governor's calling out troops." Half the power to be originated at the dam had been allotted tentatively to Arizona, Ickes said. A large aque- duct is to carry water across the Cali- fornia desert to Los Angeles. "Arizona is to be congratulated that its financial condition is such that she can afford to call out the National Guard," the secretary told news- papermen. "However, I believe there was no necessity, because it is a mat- ter which ultimately will have to be settled in the courts." Appearing at the National Guard Armory where the troops were pre- paring for an Armistice Day parade, Gov. Moeur issued the mobilization orders, then reviewed the guardsmen. 'This Is Our Last Stand' The soldiers, including machine' gunners, wore their regimental in- signia of a gila monster and the mot- to: "Cuidado" -"Beware" in Span- ish. This is our last stand," said Gov. Moeur in addressing the troops. Overalled workers yesterday hauled a pile-driving derrick back to the California side of the river. They explained that "we don't want any- one from Arizona monkeying around the derrick, which cost about $20,000." When the troops arrive, Major F. I. Pomeroy, of Mesa, will be placed in command with the title, "Com- mander of the Colorado River De- tachment, Arizona National Guard." Slosson And Shepard Talk Against War Committee Against War Sponsors Open-Air Rally In Front Of Library Economic System Bad, Speaker Says Modern Warfare Migh t L e a d To Civilization's Fall, Slosson Declares A miscellaneous group of more than 200 students heard Prof. Preston W. Slosson, of the history department, and Prof. John F. Shepard, of the psychology department, address an open air anti-war meeting yesterday in front of the library. The meeting, sponsored by the United Front Committee Against War, was begun shortly after 10 a.m., when classes had been dismissed for ob- servance of Armistice Day, and came to a close just before the 'Varsity band marched down the diagonal to join the R.O.T.C. for the parade to Hill Auditorium. After Michael Evanoff, '35L, the chairman of the meeting, had weath- ered some spasmodic heckling to give his ideas on "the double-edged sword of war and fascism," Professor Slos- son explained to a sober audience his opinion of the last war and of the i ways to prevent another. Warfare Called A Nuisance Though he called the United States participation in the World War "just and necessary," and named Wood- row Wilson "one of the greatest statesemen of all times," Professor Slosson declared that modern warfare. has become "an intolerable nuisance" I that might lead to a collapse of civili- zation far worse than the fall of: Rome. Asserting that war is a result of the failure of foreign policy, he prescribed as preventatives universally sup- ported arbitration machinery, such as the World Court, the League of Nations, and international treaties. Professor Shepard attributed war to the widespread policy of striving to sell to foreign countries without buy- ing from them, a practice, he said, of every nation except Russia. Blames Economic System He blamed this "paradox" on the institution of individual action, and! declared that the only way war can be abolished is by getting rid of the present individualist economic sys- tem. Professor Shepard was followed by. Eugene R. Kuhne, '35, who also de- clared that the fault lies with the present economic system and that as long as the fundamental evils of the profit system remain there will be no peace. The open air meeting grew out of the anti-war rally held Sunday night in Natural Science Auditorium, at which the motion calling for the meeting was passed. The committee secured the two speakers and printed announcements of the gathering the same night. Vicknell Addresses Rally The rally was addressed by Dr. N. J. Vicknell, Detroit war veteran, and Max Salzman, both connected with the American, League Against War and Fascism. Evanoff was the chair- man of this meeting also.1 Vicknell said he had come to Ann Arbor chiefly to repay "those forty- five students who went to Detroit last May Day and were brutally beaten by the fascist police." He deplored the rapidity with which the next war crisis was approaching and pleaded for a realization of the true horror of war. Salzman charged that the New Deal is simply an introduction to fascism in the United States, that Hitler is a puppet of the munitions makers, and that only the fear of a proletarian revolution is temporarily deterring, the war-makers. Indian Cemetery Is Found By Hinsdale The discovery of nearly an acre of old Indian burial ground near North- ville was announced yesterday by Dr. W. B. Hinsdale, professor-emeritus of the theory and practice of medi- cine and associate in charge of the Great Lakes division of the Anthro- pology Museum. The ancient cemetery was un- earthed by L. V. Yerkes on whose property, at the corner of Haggerty T-iarhwav and Nine Mile Rnd the Gain Realized On University Investments S im i l a r Investments Of Last Year Show Slightly Higher Gains Loss Due To Real Estate Investment 91.19 Per Cent Of All Interest Due On Bond I Portfolio Paid University trust funds realized an income of 4.10 per cent on the $5,717,- 907 invested during the fiscal year 1933-34, according to figures released yesterday from the office of the presi- dent. The sum represents a slight de- crease of 0.23 per cent from the return on similar investments made during 1932-33. The decreased earnings of real es- tate holdings were cited as being largely responsible for the decline in income in a report compiled by Julius E. Schmidt, investment officer of the University. These real. estate hold-, ings are practically all in Michigan. Investments Explained The report shows investments di- vided as follows: bonds, $3,132,116.91 or 54.78 per cent; mortgages, $1,399,- 547.85 or 24.48 per cent; real estate, $704,595.31 or 12.32 per cent; stocks, $191,549.49 or 3.35 per cent; balance, 5.07 per cent, consisting of land con- tracts, notes, trust certificates, and $242,359.61 cash. ' In addition to these investments, student notes representing loans to' needy students, amounted to $302,- 598.01 on June 30, 1934. Bond holdings are diversified as follows: government and municipal,' 29.83 per cent; railroad, 18.53 perz cent; public utility, 36.09 per cent; industrials, 0.96 per cent; Canadian government and municipal, 6.40 pert cent; foreign, 0.02 per cent; real es-1 tate, 8.16 per cent.- Much Of Interest Paid . A total of 91.19 per cent of all in-e terest due on the entire bond port- folio was paid during the year.- Practically all of the University in-t vestments represent endowment orf trust funds given by individuals forg stated purposes, it was explained. Therefore, almost none of the ex- pendable income and none at all oft the principal can be used for general University operating expense. The report states that trust funds aim to give a reasonable income, with per-1 petuation of the principal. Medical Society To Hear Dr. R. IsaacsI Dr. Raphael Isaacs, assistant direc- tor of the Simpson Memorial Insti- tute for Medical Research, will speakt tonight at the regular monthly meet- ing of the Washtenaw County Medi- cal Society at the Union. Dr. Isaacs' subject will be "Recent1 Advances in the Diagnosis and Treat- ment of Some Diseases of the Bloode Forming Organs." Dr. Isaacs has been directly connected with the develop- ment of the newer methods of treat- ing blood diseases which have been discovered by technicians of the in-E stitute from time to time. SADLER TO MAKE TRIP Dean Herbert C. Sadler of the Col- lege of Engineering will leave today for New York where he will attend meetings of the Advisory Board of the American Bureau of Shipping, of which he is a member, and also the meetings of the Society of Naval Ar-l chitects and Marine Engineers. t He expects to return by the end of the week. . Ohio State Will Not ."ear"Varsity Rand; Detroit Lions Will Those ardent football enthusiasts, the Varsity bandsmen - 100 boys who never miss a game - won't see Mich- igan in action against Ohio State Sat- urday, but they're not going to let a week-end pass without playing for a football crowd. The band will be the guests Sunday of the Detroit Lions at the University of Detroit Stadium when the Detroit professionals engagehtheSt. Louis Gunners (thelatter name beingthe new alias for the team formerly called the Cincinnati Reds. Still glowing from a successful week-end in Minneapolis 10 days ago, the band is determined not to be cheated out of a game by the lack of funds for a trip to Columbus, and will furnish music for the Detroit crowd and introduce some new ele- ments into professional football when it turns its marching talent to the spelling of "LIONS" on the U. of D. field. In a year singularly devoid of out- of-town trips by bands of the Big Ten, Michigan fans have had no op- portunity to observe two bands on the Stadium field here since the State game. But word was received over the week-end that 125 members of the huge Northwestern University band' will make the Ann Arbor trip Nov. 24, their second appearance in the city in three years.' Second Year Class Parties PublishSlates Both Parties Of Literary1 School Seem Confident i Of Victory In Election All parties in the sophomore class were expending their best efforts last night in an eleventh-hour drive for votes. Party leaders in the two old line parties of the literary college, i the only college in which new parties have not signified their intention ofE entering the field, expressed theirt confidence that their slates would bei elected. - The State Street party in the liter-e ary collegeearly last week announced that their slate would be as follows:t for president, William Oliver, Chi Psi;t for vice-president, Betty Vinton, In-c dependent; for secretary, Virginia Callow, Alpha Chi Omega; and for; treasurer, Al Dewey, Zeta Psi.1 Candidates Are Announced 1 Tom Ayers, caucus chairman for the Washtenaw-Coalition party in the literary college announced the slate of that party. It has nominated Merrell1 Jordon, Phi Kappa Sigma, for presi- dent; Mary Andrew, Independent, for1 vice-president; Betty King, Delta Delta Delta, for secretary; and Ed- ward Schmidt, Independent, for treas- urer. Two parties are also lined up in the engineering college. State Street1 will run a slate consisting of Joe1 Kompton, Independent, for president; Miller Sherwood, Sigma Phi, for vice- president; Edward Vandervelde, In-, dependent, for secretary; David Eis- endrath, Independent, for treasurer; and Bob Daily, Psi Upsilon, for aa position on the Honor Council. Engineer Slate Giveno The Consolidated Engineers in the engineering college last night an- 1 nounced their slate as follows: for president, Don Hillier, Delta Kappa Epsilon; for vice-president, Ralph Smith, Independent; for secretary, John Ingold, Independent; for treas- urer, Paul Nims, Independent; and for the Honor Council, Chuck Holkins,( Theta Xi. All party leaders expect to see a large vote turn out when the polls open. The hours of voting and the polling places will be announced in tomorrow's Daily. Armiis tice Celebrated In Meeting4 Doctor Brashares Is Main Speaker; Many Others On Program Parade Held Before SpeakingProgram 'Hoping To Bring Utopia To Earth Many Went To War,' Says Brashares With the statement that the world is now one in its needs, tasks, victor- ies, and despairs as the keynote, stu- dent and local patriotic organizations united yesterday to honor those who died in the World War. Ceremonies, held in Hill Auditor- ium, followed a parade along East and North University Avenues by the Varsity-R.O.T.C. Band, Company K of the National Guard, the Reserve Officers Training Corps regiment, the American Legion drum and bugle corps, and various veteran's groups. The opening of the program, an organ solo, was followed by an address by the Rev. Charles W. Brashares, of the First Methodist Church. Dr. Brashares eulogized the war dead as "men who failed to get their just re- wards on this earth." He commented on the love of life which these men had, even as all other people, but said "there must be somewhere where they will receive according to the good they did on earth." Armistice Was Millennium The belief which many had in answering their country's call was that they were helping in bringing Utopia to earth, Dr. Brashares said, and he told how they answered "with stout hearts, to do their best amidst the awful situations. "And in the fullness of time, at the eleventh hour of the eleventh day of the eleventh month, five and eleven years-ago, came Armistice. Many were those who could never again hear earthly trumpets however - those who had gone west -beyond the set- ting sun. It is with the thought of them as the foremost thing that we celebrate the Armistice." Dr. Brashares closed his address by saying that, whether we know it or not, we have come into a world re- lationship, and the world is one for good. Lynch Gives Invocation The invocation was given by the Rev. John S. Lynch, pastor of St. Thomas church, and the benediction by Rabbi Bernard Heller. Achilles Taliaferro played an organ solo, "Piece Heroique," and Mark Bills sang Kipling's "Recessional." The program closed with the play- ing of "The Star Spangled Banner" by the Varsity Band, and of Taps by two buglers of the national guard company. Among those on the plat- form were Ann Arbor's few surviving veterans of the Civil War, veterans of other United States campaigns, May- or Robert A. Campbell, Lieut.-Col. Frederick W. Rogers, members of the Army and Navy Club, and University administrative officers. Dr. Carleton B. Pierce, president of the Army and Navy Club, presided. Architects Studying Inexpensive Homes Feeling that at present there is a scarcity of the small low-rental homes and that the demand for this type of housing is on the increase, the College of Architecture is prepar- ing its students to meet this concrete situation by concentrating all its de- sign classes on developing plans for inexpensive homes. To make the problem more realis-' tic, a certain plot of land within Ann Arbor has been selected as the fic- tional site for these houses. Various types are being developed, from small double homes at a cost of $6,000, to large housing schemes to take care of 4,500 people. For the most part, the type of building suitable to house married student couples or profes- sor families is the new primary aim. Supreme Court A i d s Mooney's Freedom Plea WASHINGTON, Nov. 12--(P)- A key for the lock that holds Tom Mooney prisoner was fashioned to- day by the Supreme Court, but wheth- Permission Not Needed For Foreign Exchange Transactions WASHINGTON, Nov. 12. - (P)- Restrictions upon transactions in for- eign exchange, imposed when the treasury was initiating its attempt to regulate the value of the dollar abroad, were removed today by Sec- retary Morgenthau. The requirement that treasury per- mission be obtained for all shipments of currency and transfers of credit abroad was eliminated and in its stead was substituted one that those dealings in sums exceeding $5,000 in any week report to the nearest Federal Reserve Bank so that a tab might be kept upon movements of capital. Thomas Jefferson Coolidge, assis- tant secretary of the treasury, said that the new order would permit people to "take their money out of the country" whenever they desire to do so. "Heretofore," he added, "they have had to ask permission. We have been accustomed to grant such permission. Now they do not have to ask this permission. It will have no economic effect." The supervision of the dollar's for- eign value still continues.' Two Given Treatments As Result Of Accident Dr Onderdonk Calls American Attitude Hindrance To Peace By JOHN J. FLAHERTY and good-will. Dr. Onderdonk said it Dr. Francis S. Onderdonk, recently must not be forgotten that the League, returned from a lecture tour of the when looked at in the broad expanse East in the interests of world peace, of historical time, was a mere 15 described the state of pacifist move- years old, and that too much should ments in an interview last night. not be expected from it. He pointed Dr. Onderdonk's lectures, which out that we hardly expect a human of were sponsored by the Peace Films the age of 15 seconds to be of much Caravan, a local organization in op- utility. position to war, were illustrated by Dr. Onderdonk said one impediment films, one of them being a sound pic- to peace movements in this countryj ture of ''The Next War." He delivered was the colossal ignorance of Amer- these lectures at Princeton. Harvard. icans that works in a vicious circle. Millions Read 'In His Steps,' Yet Author Is Uncompensated, Few would believe it possible to write a book that was so good that 23,000,000 copies were sold and re- ceive no compensation for the work. Yet this is what happened to Dr. Charles M. Sheldon, who wrote "In His Steps," and who will speak Nov. 15 in Hill Auditorium under the aus- pices of the Student Christian Asso- ciation. After reading his book to his Sun- day evening congregation Dr. Sheldon tried to sell the manuscript to three different publishers in Chicago. All fact that the copyright bureau had is- sued a certificate to the publisher for the first book off the press. The defect was not discovered until the Advance had sold more than 10,000 copies of the ten cent paper bound volumes, and the demand was still increasing. Certain book pub- lishers then discovered the error in the copyright and by June, 1897, nine months after the book was written, sixteen different companies in the United States had taken advantage of the defect and were publishing the