The Weather Increasing cloudiness and rising temperature today; to- morrow cloudy. L Sfir i an :43 tii Editorials A Respected Opponent ... Progress For The Negro.. . VOL. XLVI. No. 28 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1935+ PRICE FIVE CENTS Complete Plans For Pep_ Rally Lawton To Give Principal Address And Introduce New 'Meechigan' Song Meeting Scheduled For 8 P.M. Friday Slosson Says Joining League Only SafePath For America By BERNARD WEISSMAN The League of Nations was pictured as the only hope for the United States to remain aloof from the diplomatic entanglements arising out of the Italo-Ethiopian war by Prof. Preston W. Slosson of the history department last night before an overflow crowd in Hutchins Hall Auditorium. Declaring that such a thing as neu- trality in foreign relations is no long- er possible, Professor Slosson de- scribed difficulties that may nullify the effect of our recent neutrality legislation. Congress' measures are directed indiscriminately against all belliger- ents, he said, but, because of the peculiar conditions of the situation, have amounted to a virtual support of the League's coercion of Italy. Yet, he explained, if the League invokes a blockade against Italy, it will, according to Mussolini's an- nounced attitude, be tantamount to an act of war. Thus, according to our neutrality policy, we would be obliged to sever trade relations with all the members of the League, he went on. Recalling that this country had become involved in the Napoleonic Wars and in the World War in at- tempts to protect our neutral rights, Professor Slosson asserted that an analagous situation may easily arise unless we abandon our efforts to cling to neutrality and join officially and whole-heartedly in the League's peace efforts. He attributed the League's prompt- ness in applying sanctions against Italy partly to the clearness of the case against her and partly to the motives impelling individual mem- bers of the League. Great Britain, he said, is vitally interested in the conflict because it has two colonies and a dependency adjoining Ethiopia and because of the strategic position of the Suez Canal, in which it holds a major share. France is concerned chiefly because it desires to keep both Great Britain and Italy as potential allies in the event of an attack by Germany, while Russia's interest is due to a wish to strengthen the League as a guaran- tee against Japanese or German ag- gression, Professor Slosson continued. The readiness of the minor mem- bers of the League to support sanc- tions was attributed by the speaker to a sincere backing of the League as a future safeguard for themselves. Charles Baird, Yost, Keene Fitzpatrick Speak AtGathering And Will The completed plans for "the big- gest and best pep meeting we've had in the last ten years" were announced last night by Athletic Director Field- ing H. Yost. chairman of the meeting. Meeting in Hill Auditorium at 8 p.m. Friday, students and other sup- porters of the Wolverines will hear J. Fred Lawton, '11, composer of the words to the march, "Varsity," in the principal address. Mr. Lawton will introduce his new song, "It's a Great Big Meechigan Day," dedicated to Mr. Yost and his pronunciation of the word, which was heard for the first time at the banquet of Detroit alumni before the Michigan State game. The music for the song was written by Oswald Fluemer, of Pontiac, who will be here as a member of the quar- tet which sang the new march in De- troit, and which will introduce it to Ann Arbor -students Friday night. Should the quartet need help, or should it be unable to appear, the glee club is ready to step in and in- troduce the number, Prof. David M attern of the School of Music said yesterday. Band To Appear The Varsity R.O.T.C. Band, under the direction of Prof. William D. Revelih, will contribute the usual Michigan marches to the program of the pep-meeting, and the cheer-lead- ing squad will be present to help the students "lift the roof .bi," , "I think we're going to have the biggest and pest pep-meeting we've had in the last ten years," Mr. Yost said in announcing the plans for the meeting. "The spirit and enthusiasm of the students and alumni is fine and the members of the squad are bound to absorb a lot of it." "The pep-meeting's going to be a big and enthusiastic one," he con- tinued, "the place '11 be packed." Baird To Speak In addition to Mr. Lawton, Keene Fitzpatrick, former track coach and football trainer, Charles Baird, '95L, the University's first athletic director, and Mr. Yost will speak on the pro-i gram. Mr. Yost spoke of the group as having had "35 years of experience in speaking at mass meetings." Mr. Baird, whose life-size oil por- trait will be hung in the lobby of the Union Saturday morning as part of the homecoming program, recently gave the University the funds to build the projected carillon here. Mr. Fitzpatrick, long a track coach here, who recently retired from his post as trainer at Princeton, produced two Olympic double winners- among the many champions he produced while at Michigan. P.T.A. Institute Opens Two-Day Session Today Sponsored by the University and the Michigan Congress of Parents and Teachers, the sixth annual Parent EducationInstitute opens a two-day meeting today in University High School. A series of nine conferences will be held this afternoon following a talk, by Ralph Bridgman of the National Council of Parent Education. These conferences will cover such subjects as the use of money -children's ex- periences with money, how disci- pline can be used to develop initiative and independence in children, the radio and the movies, feeding, menu planning, clothing, recreational ac- tivities of children in the home, hob- bies for children, the contribution of the P.T.A. toward parent education, parents' responsibility in the choice of vocation for children, and books for the home library. This afternoon's program opens at 1:30 p.m. and at 8 p.m. Dr. Conline Tar . vr + . WIrma iThM ror4miokr, 40 Engineers Pick Second . Election Slate' 'United' Party Joins Fight With Cox And Sherwood Running For Posts Forty engineering college juniors, styling themselves the "United En- gineers," met last night in the Union to select an election slate which will oppose the, Consolidated Engineers in the junior class elections Nov. 13. Benjamin Cox, Phi Kappa Psi was chosen by the group to run for J- Hop chairman. Other men on the ticket include Miller Sherwood, Sig- ma Phi, president; Cedric Sweet, Independent, vice president; William Sheehan, ThetaChiesecretary; ..Jack Kasley, Independent, treasurer; John Freese, Phi Sigma Kappa, and Gus Collatz, Independent, J-Hop commit- teemen; Jack Cooper, Trigon, dele- gate to the Engineering Council; and Burton Coffey, Phi Gamma Delta, delegate to the Honor Council. The Consolidated Engineers' slate, as announced last Thursday, includes George Malone, Independent, presi- dent; Robert Dailey, Psi Upsilon, vice president; Melville G. Hyatt, Tri- angle, secretary; Carl Sherburne, Phi Kappa Tau, treasurer; Jack Sinn, Sigma Nu, Honory Council; Rush Bowman, Delta Upsilon, J-Hop chair- man; Carl S. Abbott, Theta Xi, and Donald Hillier, Delta Kappa Epsilon, J-Hop committeemen. TO BECOME MASON BOSTON, Oct. 30.-(P)-The Traveler says Franklin D. Roosevelt Jr., is being coached in the Masonic ritual, and with his brother James will be made a third degree Mason by President Roosevelt, Nov. 7, in New. Four Are Killed As Airliner Explodes CHEYENNE, Wyo., Oct. 30.- UP) - Fotur persons were killed tonight when a giant airliner of the United Air Lines crashed and exploded on a hill top six miles south of Chey- enne. The plane was a test ship which the company sent on a circling tour of the city a few minutes before it crashed. The officials of the company were informed a gasoline tank exploded when the plane touched the hilltops. The dead are: M. C. Arnold, chief test pilot of the United Air Lines, of Cheyenne, formerly of Chicago. Abe Cohen, veteran pilot of the Wyoming Air Service, Cheyenne. Edward Yantiss, of the United In- strument Crew of Cheyenne. Harold Kaufmann, of ,Cheyenne, apprentice instrument man of the UAL instrument shop here. 30 Hours Per Month Is NYA Maximum All University students working on the NYA are forbidden to put in more than 30 hours a month and eight hours a day, the University Commit- tee on the NYA warned in a state- ment yesterday. There have been cases of graduate students, who are permitted to earn more than $15 per month, the maxi- mum for undergraduates, working more than the limited number of hours in a month or a day, the state- ment said. All hours exceeding the monthly or daily quota will not count, the committee emphasized.I All hours must be in by the twenty- sixth of each month, rather than the last Saturlay of the month, as was previously stated, the committee an- One Killedln Crack-Up Of ArmyPlane Mammoth Fighting Ship Fails In Flight Tests By Army Air Corps Four More Injured As Bomber Crashes Two Engines Of Ill-Fated Boeing 'Flying Fortress' Falter At 200 Feet DAYTON, O., Oct. 30. - () - America's biggest bombing plane crashed to earth and burst into flames today, injuring fatally one of the five men it carried. The ship was the Boeing "flying fortress," undergoing tests by the Army Air Corps in preparations for strengthening the Nation's air fleet. The crash killed Maj. P. P. Hill, chief of the flying branch at Wright Field here, and official pilot for the tests of three bombers undergoing trials. He and four others took the huge bomber aloft today. Its four 700- horse-power engines had barely pul- led them 200 feet off the ground be- fore, witnesses said, the two left motors appeared to falter. The two right motors pulled the big ship around in a 180 degree turn, the left wing dipped, and the bomber crashed, still upright, but facing a direction almost opposite to that in which it had headed. A wall of flames burst up as it crashed, and then an explosion shattered the wreckage. But even before the Wright Field ambulance, always ready for such emergencies, had hurried up, Lieut. L. F. Harmon and R. K. Giovannoli, among the witnesses, had thrown their coats over their heads, buried their faces in their arms, and charged into the flames to drag the bomber's test crew to safety. The injured were Lieut. Donald L. Putt,. 30 years old. of Yakima, Wash., co-pilot in the tests; Leslie Tower, chief Boeing test pilot; John Cutting, 28, Wright Field observer, and Mark H. Koogler, 38, Wright Field em- ployee. Though an investigation board be- gan work immediately, it had not been learned hours later who was at the controls at the time of the crash, and Wright Field officials said that the reasons for the crash would not be clarified until the injured are able to give their testimony. Maj. Hill, Putt, or Tower might have been pilot- ing the ship, it was said. immy Walker Will Be Given Warm Greeting Large Crowd Will Meet Ex-Mayor But Tammany Officials Remain Aloof NEW YORK, Oct. 30. - (P - Its memory fleeting, its sympathies quickly warmed, the big town whipped up an enthusiastic greeting tonight for James J. Walker on his arrival home tomorrow. Obscured by three years of self- imposed exile in Europe, the person- ality of "Goodtime" Jimmy Walker was slowly emerging more and more vividly in its old colors in New York's mind with each mile the former Mayor was brought nearer New York. The liner Manhattan, bearing Wal- ker and his wife, the former Betty Compton, will reach quarantine some time after noon tomorrow. A flotilla of at least seven boats will meet the Manhattan down the bay, while a contingent of 2,000 brewers will be massed at the pier to add to the general welcoming hubbub. But paradoxically, Tammany Hall, the political organization which nur- tured Walker's career, stood coolly aloof from the reception plans. Po- litical memories are long and while many of the Wigwam planned to be on hand to greet Walker, none court- ed publicity as members of the official Tammany roster. Phi Eta Sigma To Hold Smoker For Freshmen Following its program of encour- 'Leage CommitteeMeets To Plan When Economic Seie On Italy Will Start Detroit Woman Believed Taken By Kidnapers Wife Of Windsor Doctor Reported Missing After Frantic Phone Call DETROIT, Oct. 30. - () - Dr. J. H. McGraw, Windsor, Ont., chiropo- dist, asked police tonight to aid in a search for his wife, Mrs. Dorothy Hess McGraw, believed kidnaped. McGraw told police he received a telephone call from his wife at his Windsor office about 5 p.m. and said she told him "Honey, they've got me," before the connection was closed. McGraw said he hurried to his De- troit apartment, and found Mrs. Mc- Graw absent. A search of the neigh- borhood he said, revealed she had visited a grocery about 1:30 p.m. He said two street cleaners told him they saw a woman seized and put in a green coupe by two men near the grocery, but did not obtain their name. He said the worker told him the car (a Cadillac) bore Florida li- cense plates. McGraw's wife's report was re- ceived by police about 5 p.m. and the Department of Justice investigators were asked to aid in the case. Mrs. McGraw, who is 53 years old, formerly lived at Akron, O. They have been married about a month, her husband said. McGraw told officers his wife wore 5 diamonds valued at $3,500. Loan On Corn. Crop Effective December 1st WASHINGTON, Oct. 30. - UP) - A loan of 45 cents a bushel on the 1935 corn crop was announced today by the AAA. Secretary Henry A. Wallace said that the Commodity Credit Corp. had approved recommendations of the AAA for the loan to farmers who signed adjustment contracts for 1935. The loan will become effec- tive Dec. 1 and will mature July 1, 1936. Loans will be made on No. 3 grade corn which can be properly sealed and stored on the farm. Chester C. Davis, AAA administra- tor, said that the Credit corporation had asked the RFC for a maximum of $150,000,000 to finance the loan. Wallace added that he did not think that more than 150,000,000 bushels would be pledged as security for the loans. The loanrate last year was 55 cents a bushel and approximately $11,000,000 was advanced on 20,000,- 000 bushels. Will Speak Tonight Forty-One Approval Blockade HON. WILLIAM R. CASTLE * * * Lecture Series Will Be Opened By W R. Castle Positions Of United States In World Affairs To Be Discussed By Diplomat The University Oratorical Asso- ciation will open its 1935-36 lecture course at 8:15 p.m. today in Hill Auditorium with a speech by the Hon. William R. Castle, noted diplo- mat and chief of the division of Western European affairs at Wash- ington under four administrations. Castle's lecture is on the subject of "Our Relations with Other Na- tions," and will include an analysis of the positions the United States has held in world affairs during past periods in its history, during the present era and what its position should be in the future. Particular attention will be devoted by Castle to the policies of diplomacy which express the best interests of the people, and he plans to illustrate these policies by reference to diplo- matic negotiations now under way as regards the Italo-Ethiopian situa- tion, officials said. Castle is coming to Ann Arbor from an engagement yesterday in Detroit, where he spoke before a meeting of the Fisher Town Hall lecture ser- ies. He plans to meet a group of stu- dents interested in taking up the diplomatic service at 4 p.m. today in the office of the political science de- partment. Tickets for the lecture, priced at 75 and 50 cents, may be purchased any time today at the Hill Audito- rium box office. Special season ticket prices are still available at $3.50 and $2.75 for the eight lectures sched- uled on the Oratorical Course. Sep- arate tickets for the next lecture, to be given by Rear Admiral Rich- ard E. Byrd, will not be on sale until tomorrow morning. Nations Give For Financial And Boycott Certain Sanctions Are Now In Force Countries Agree To Help Those States Affected By Proposals GENEVA, Oct. 30. -P) -A plen- ary committee of 52 members of the League of Nations, with a clear ma- jority of the states definitely en- rolled in an economic and financial siege on Italy, meets tomorrow to decide when the seige will actually begin. Forty-one out of 56 nations have officially announced their willingness to begin a financial blockade. Thirty- nine have enrolled in the "buy noth- ing" boycott and "key products em- bargo projects; 44 have accepted an arms embargo against Italy. Twenty-six states have agreed to the proposal for mutual assistance to nations hit by applying sanctions. Sanctions in some form, said an official report to be presented to the committee of 18 tomorrow, have al- ready been put into effect by 32 nations. All these have begun en- forcing the arms embargo and 19 have put the financial blockade into operation. A survey disclosed that not only a clear majority of League states, but an overwhelming majority of the League's purchasing power is en- rolled in the "buy nothing" feature of the drive to starve Italy's 'war. Actually, there are 58 League mem- bers since Germxany's withdrawal. Two, however, Italy and Ethiopia, are not counted in the sanctions roll call since they are parties to the dis- pute. Four of the remaining 56 --El Sal- vador, Guatemala, the Dominican Republic, and Paraguay - did not participate in this year's assembly deliberations and thus are not repre- sented on the plenary committee of 52 which meets tomorrow. As to the states which have not yet replied, League officials point out that of the 19 who have not officially accepted economic sanctions, 13 are Latin-American states, most with comparatively small purchasing power. EXPORTERS WARNED WASHINGTON, Oct. 30. - (P)-- President Roosevelt warned Ameri- can exporters today that the Gov- ernment is keeping a careful check on all shipments consigned to Italy and Ethiopia. The President's warning was made in a formal statement after Secretary of State Cordell Hull earlier in the day reiterated forcefully that the pol- icy of the United States was to "dis- courage" business dealings with the warring nations. Declaring that, "this Government s determined not to become involved in the controversy, and is anxious for the restoration and maintenance of peace," the President said: "However, in the course of war, tempting trade opportunities may be offered to our people to supply ma- terials which would prolong the war. "I do not believe that the American people will wish for abnormally in- creased profits that temporarily might be secured by greatly extend- ing our trade in such materials; nor would they wish the struggles on the battlefield to be prolonged because of profits accruing to a comparatively small number of American citizens." York City. nounced. System Of Deferred Rushing Is Preferred By Freshman Women By ELSIE A. PIERCE Do the women who went through the hectic rushing period this year consider it pointless and unsatisfying or are they satisfied with the present set-up? To discover the attitude of fresh- men women towards rushing, The Daily has conducted a survey among 150 representative freshmen women, 90 of whom pledged sororities, and 60 of whom did not. Although the present system of sor- ority rushing has been increasingly lroublesome during the past few years, a proposal to defer women's rushing for at least two weeks failed last year, voted down by the repre- sentatives of all the sororities repre- sented in the Panhellenic Association, 15-4. However, this proposal was only brought before the sorority women - those who were doing the rushing, and the only chance the freshmen had to vote was in the meetings of their individual sororities. They had no chance to express their ideas as a group. However, majorities of both groups said that they would prefer a de- .r- f -+sa mphn1 ~hAQ of e wnaraim for deferment for two weeks. One' woman said she wished rushing de- ferred until the middle of the first semester. If the women voted for deferred rushing in any form, they were asked to indicate their reasons. Fifty-seven of the group, 27 sorority pledges and 30 unaffiliated women, and 19 independents, felt that rushing had kept them so busy that they were unable to make a good start with their school work. Other reasons given were that they did not have time to get to know the sorority women well enough under the present system, that rush- ing was "all too new and confusing," that it was "too exhausting," and that it was "too hurried." Several expressed the belief that rushing should be more informal, saying that "the rushees don't really get a chance to know the sorority women when the dates are so formal," while the comment of a few was that they would rather wait a semester in order that "the rushee may find out which group is most congenial." It was the opinion of one woman that rush- ing was a "necsesrv evil which Use Of Poison Gas In Ethiopia Impractical Says Prof, Hodges By TUURE TENANDER During the last few weeks, men- tion has several times been made in the newspapers of the controversies arising from the charges that Italy has used gas in her present invasion of Ethiopia. Prof. James H. Hodges, in an in- terview yesterday, stated that poison gas would be impractical to use in Africa. One of the points brought out by Professor Hodges was that of all the gases that have been used in war- fare, the only one that might possibly be effective under the unusual con- ditions met with in the Ethiopian campaign is mustard gas. "And it is problematical if even this presents any tactical value," he said. Mustard gas is an oil substance that vaporizes very slowly and when shells containing it are dropped and exnlnded the liuiid and its vanor not be utilized in Ethiopia where there are few cities and where the people are scattered over large areas." Another important reason for the effectiveness of mustard gas is that it cannot be combated by means of gas masks because of its dual function, he continued. "Not only is it poisonous to inhale but it blisters the skin of an individual to such a degree that it often takes many weeks to recover from the burning effects," he added, "and that is why this chemical was so destructive in the World War." It is interesting to note how mus- tard gas, or dichloroethyl sulphide, if you are technically minded, ac- complishes this task of blistering, Professor Hddges explained. The vapor of the mustard oil is soluble in fat, enabling it to dissolve in the fatty substances surrounding the indivi- dual cells of the human skin, he pointed out. "It is therefore pos- ihla nr it. toen + ter then aoitsef 1 Selassie Orders Arms Unearthed ADDIS ABABA, Oct. 30.-UP)- Emperor Haile Selassie today ordered all buried arms dating from the time of his uncle, Emperor Menelik, un- earthed for distribution to reserve troops. Thousands of American Winches- ters are included in the caches. Fearful that Ethiopia would at any time be invaded, Menelik made a regular practice of burving huge