The Weather Rain in southeast, slightly coldersTuesday; Wednesday local snows. L lee 4kv 4V at Editorials A Cur etFor Wild Thinkg'... Tibbteltis Cure For Opera.. I VOL. XLVI No. 32. ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1935 PRICE FIVE CENTS Miami Hit By Severe Hurricane Five Are Reported Killed As Second Storm Lashes Across Everglades Heavy Damage Is Incurred In Cities Fear Is Expressed For The Safety Of Inhabitants Of Florida Keys MIAMI, Fla., Nov. 4. - () - The second hurricane of the season lashed Miam i today, caused five reported deaths, swung across the sparsely- settled.Everglades and passed into the Gulf of Mexico. The weather bureau said the storm .:mroved into the Gulf at 8 p.m. E.S.T., abeut t30 miles south of Everglade City. The storm's path was about 60 miles north of Key West and all danger was believed gone for the low- er Keys area. Word reached here that more than 200 FERA workers and residents of the Keys had reached the town of Homestead safely, but anxiety was felt for persons, believed still on Rag- ged Key, Virginia Key, Long Key, and other small islands southwestward of the mainland,4 Gordon E. Dunn, Jacksonville me- terologist, said the hurricane might regain force over the Gulf and prob- ably would swing northwestward. Houses Collapse Two were known dead, a 13-year- old girl named Levi, and an uniden- tified man caught in the collapse of houses in the northwest section of Miami. Police were told a woman and a baby were electrocuted by a fallen wire, but confirmation was lacking. A sailor aboard the Hariha, a boat in the hurricane area, was re- ported killed when struck by a ven- tilator which had been opened by the wind. His name was not learned. Miami suftered extensive property damage, and late reports from cities north of here said damage was heavy in Ft. Lauderdale, Hollywood, and Dania. Dania was reported hardest hit. Bricks showered down on residents -as they scurried to the more substan- tial buildings. One woman's back was broken by bricks cut loose by the wind from atop the Pershing Hotel. Another woman was blown against a building so hard her back was brok- en Metal and woodein signs were blown through the streets like so much pap- er. Trees were uprooted throughout the business and residential sections. Heavy plate glass windows collapsed, letting the winds rip through the in- teriors of stores. . Cars Careen Through Streets The tin roof of the. Professional Building ,was ripped off. Driverless automobiles careened along the streets. The wind picked up one ma- chine like a plaything and dropped it in a clump of palm trees. Several were marooned when waves lapped over a causeway between Miami and Miami Beach. The Tropical Radio Telegraph Co. reported late today that all towers of its station were down and the build- ing housing its transmitters was legk- ing badly. The steamships Sneland and Florida were reported disabled off the Florida Coast. All communication lines to Palm Beach were flattened in the first burst of the storm. Later, however, it was learned that Palm Beach had escaped the full force of the hurricane. The highest wind velocity reported by the Miami Weather Bureau was 83 miles an hour. The barometer fell to 28.73 inches, but a short time later it had risen to 29.27. Ruthven Opens Way For eW Build ings Petitioning the Common Council at its meeting held at 8 p.m. last night, to have the city vacate South Ingalls St., President Alexander G. Ruthven opened the way for the construc- tion of the new Graduate School and the Baird Campanile. A motion of Prof. Leigh J. Young for the reconsideration of the vote on the revision of zoning ordinance to accommodate the State in obtain- ing the old Hoover residence for an institution was voted down. It was decided to wait until a public hearing, Coach Yost's Pronunciation Of 'Meechigan' May Be Correct By FRED WARNER NEAL "Meechigan" says Mr. Yost, and everybody laughed at the pronouncia- tion and Fred Lawton wrote a song about it. But maybe the Old Man is not so wrong after all. Fifty million French- men pronounce it just like Mr. Yost, -Meechigan. Members of the French department came forward last night to defend the director of athletics at Michigan - or Meechigan. It seems that the name of the state came down to English from the Indian through the French. "The word 'Michigan,' like so many other English words," explained Prof. Charles Knudson of the French de- partment, "came to the English from a French spelling of the Indian word. The French pronounced the Indian Vvord 'Meechigon,' and that is where we got the 'ch' being pronounced like the English 'sh'." Charles E. Koella, also of the French department, and several other French professors, backed up Pro- fessor Knudson's contention that as taken oier from the English the French pronounced the word "Meech- igon," and the English "Meechigan." The controversial word originally came from the Algonquin Indians, who inhabited the Wolverine state be- fore the coming of the white man. They used it, with an extra syllable, according to Dr. Wilbert M. Hinsdale of the anthropology museum, to de- note Lake Michigan. The word means "big lake," explained Mr. Hinsdale. But the doctor deprecated Mr. Yost's accuracy of pronounciation. "He came from the South," he said. But nevertheless, the fact remains that the French, in -taking the word from the Indians, spelled and pro- nounced it "Meechigon;" and furth- ermore that it was adopted from the French "Meechigan." Mr. Yost, however, denied all knowledge of the whole affair. "I just pronounce it 'Meechigan,' he drawled. Yessir, it's a great big Meechigan Day. - I Major Parties Watch Today's State Ballots Local Elections Expected To Indicate National Political Set-Up WASHINGTON, Nov. 4. - (A') - Taking weather-vane indications of, how the state political winds of 1936J may blow, national chieftains of both the Democratic and Republican par- ties tonight were primed for closest scrutiny of tomorrow's state elections. With some national issues superim- posed upon local political rivalries and the play of personalities which accompanies them, New York and New Jersey will elect state legislatures' and Kentucky a governor. In addi- tion New York will choose two mem- bers of the national house of repre- sentatives and Kentucky a third. Meanwhile Philadelphia's citizens will choose a mayor and Virginia anid Mississippi will go through the rou- tine of ratifying candidates for state1 office already selected in Democratic1 primary elections. President Roosevelt wilf vote in person at his home town of Hyde Park, N. Y., symbolizing, perhaps, the national tinge that has been givena the election there by spokesmen for both the old line parties. Melvin C. Eaton, Republican state chairman, -has repeatedly appealed, for votes as a repudiation of the New Deal, and his latest assertion was a prediction that the results would be "the most severe setback for Roose- velt's reelection hopes received thus far." Postmaster General James A. Far- ley, who is New York State's as well as national Democratic chairman, al- so raised a broad national question from the other side of the political' dividing line. He was confident, he said, that the outcome "would reflect1 the satisfaction of the people that complete prosperity is nearly here." The New York election has further national implications in the fact that{ it is President Roosevelt's home state and that his close friend and sup- porter, Gov. Herbert H. Lehmann has called for the election of a Demo- cratic state assembly. Whether or not, here and else- where, national issues have been ar- tifically injected as some contend rather than flowing naturally from local candidates and issues,athe gen- eral result will be seized upon for po- litical capital by whichever party they seem to favor. Wallace Approves Corn And Hog Plan WASHINGTON, Nov. 4. - (A) - Secretary of Agriculture Harry A. Wallace signed a formal proclama- tion today calling for a two-year ad- justment program for control of corn and hog production. The Secretary's actions complied with terms of the AAA amendments which required him to find a program necessary and feasible to AAA of- ficials said they hoped to announce final details of the program within 30 days after the close of the con- ferences which started today with corn-hog farmers and agricultural scientists. Last Freshman Forum To ie Ild At Uninn Elmer O'Hara Is Found Guilty On Bribe Count Sentence Deferred Until Election Fraud Charge Is Tried MT. CLEMENS, Nov. 4.-- (W)- A Macomb County jury returned a ver- dict tonight of "guilty as charged" against Elmer P. O'Hara, Wayne County clerk and chairman of the Democratic state committee, on trial in circuit court here on a charge of bribery. The'verdict was returned by the jury after two hours and 55 minutes of deliberation. Only three ballots were taken. Judge Parm Gilbert, presiding at the trial, deferred sentence until the January term of court, explaining he did not believe O'Hara should be sen- tenced on the charge until the trial of O'Hara and 33 other defendants later this month on a charge of elec- tion fraud growing out of the legis- lative recount of last December in Detroit. Judge Gilbert fixed $2,000 as bond for O'Hara pending sentence. He had been at liberty since his indict- merit on his own recognizance. Conviction of the bribery charge carries a maximum penalty of five years in prison and $1,000 fine. Edward N. Barnard, chief of de- fense counsel, said an appeal would be filed immediately. "There was nothing in the evidence to substan- tiate the verdict," he declared. "We will appeal at once." Frank G. Davis, 75-year-old fire- man of the jury, said two jurors voted for acquittal on the first ballot, one on the second, and that the poll was unanimous for conviction on the third. CHICAGO ON EASTERN TIME CHICAGO, Nov. 4.- (/') - The City Council adopted an ordinance today placing Chicago on Eastern Stand- ard Time the year around, effective March 1. The vote was 44 to 3. An amendment, which would have sub- mitted the time change as a refer- endum, was tabled. Elections Are Delayed Until November 13 Student Directory's Non- Appearance Reason For Postponement Next Wednesday Is Set As New Date Voting Machines Feature Class Elections Here For First Time The oft-postponed class elections have been postponed once again. Because the Student Directory, which is used in all elections as a registration-list check, has not yet put in an appearance, it will be im- possible to hold the senior election before Wednesday, Nov. 13, William R. Dixon, '36, president of the Men's Council, said last night. The directory is scheduled to ap- pear Saturday, and it is therefore considered certain that the voting will start the following Wednesday, Dixon stated. Members of the committee in charge of the elections were an- nounced last night. The group, headed by Dixon as general chair- man, includes: John Strayer, '36, John McCarthy, '36, Sanford Ladd, '37, Wencel Neu- mann, '36E, Francis Wallace, '36E, Richard Pollman, '36A, Roscoe Day, Grad., Clarence Markham, '36BAd. and Marshall Sleet, '36SM. All are members of the Men's Council. Two voting machines secured from the Automatic Voting Machine Corp. of Philadelphia will be used for the elections. A large machine of stand- ard size will be used to tabulate the Ivote in the literary college, where the balloting is expected to be heavy. A small instrument will be employed for the elections in the architecture college, the music school, the business administration school, the engineer- ing college, and the forestry school. To date only two parties have an- nounced their slate of candidates. They are the "United Engineers" and the "Consolidated Engineers." In- terest this year is expected to center about the junior engineer elections, for it is the engineers' turn to choose the leader of the J-Hop. OhioState Denies Long Count' Gauge COLUMBUS, O., Nov. 4. - (W) - Three athletic officials of Ohio State set at rest tonight reports circulating among football fans that the last quarter of the Notre Dame contest might have been a bit longer than regulation time. The Irish made their last two touchdowns Saturday during the couple of minutes and the final one only a few seconds before the end, to win 18-13. The fans' gossip was at least partly inspired by the fact that the electric clock in the stadium showed the time was up more than a minute before the final gun sounded. Today L. W. St. John, Ohio State athletic director, and Dr. Walter Dussde team physician, said they sat in the Ohio State stands with a stop watch on the game and that their watches coincided with the field judges.' _______ New Cabaret Head Chosen By Council Angeline Maliszewski Is Appointed Chairman Of Sophomore Affair Merit System Used As Selection Basis Nine Women Named For .Central Committee Of Class Project Angeline Maliszewski will act as general chairman of this year's Soph- omore Cabaret, the League Under- graduate Council announced last night. The other nine members of the cen- tral committee appointed last night were: Hope Hartwig, assistant chair- man; Miriam Sanders, finance chair- 'man; HNriiet Shackleton, hostess committee, Mary Kelkenny, enter- tainment; Roberta Melin, publicity; Mary Ellen McCord, program; Berta Knudson, costumes; Florence Mc- Conkey, decorations; and Elizabeth Whitney, music. Following the appointment system inaugurated last fall in the election of officers for class projects, the Council used the merit system as a basis for nominating the central committee. Miss Maliszewski, who is from Grosse Pointe, is an independent, and is a member of the Assembly. She has served as the social chaiman of Mosher Hall as well as being a memb- er of the Mosher Hall house council. Last year, she participated in the Frosh Project, and did volunteer work on the Sophomore Cabaret. Served On Project The assistant chairman, Miss Hart- wig, Ann Arbor, is a member of Kap- pa Alpha Theta sorority, and is on the social committee of the League. She served on the entertainment committee for the Freshman Mardi Gras, and is a member of the W.A.A. Board: Miss Whitney, of Ann Arbor, is af- filiated with Collegiate Sorosis, and Miss Shackleton, Joliet, Ill., is a mem- ber of Kappa Alpha Theta. Miss Sanders is from Highland Park, and is a member of Alpha Lambda Delta, freshmen women's honor society. Miss Melin, Cambridge, Ill., is af- filiated with Delta Gamma sorority, and Miss McCord, Detroit, is a mem- ber of Delta Delta Delta sorority. Miss Kelkenny transferred from Michigan State College. Miss McConkey, Ann Arbor, and Miss Knudson, Spring- field, Ill., are unaffiliated. The chairman of the ticket commit- tee is to be appointed by the central committee later this week. All women interested in a position on the Sophomore Cabaret submitted petitions to the Judiciary Council, who in turn, interviewed each appli- cant, and made recommendations to the League Council. Council Judges Petitions The League Council considered these recommendations, and made the appointments on the basis of the candidate's leadership, efficiency, ac- tivities record and scholarship. More than 140 petitions were sub- mitted, according to Winifred Bell, '36, chairman of the Judiciary Coun- cil. All women who submitted pe- titions and did not receive an ap- pointment will be placed on the com- mitteesin which they signified an interest. Jean Seeley, '36, president of the League, in commenting on the Coun- cil's appointments said, "We are par- ticularly pleased this year in the se- lection of major positions for the Sophomore Cabaret. It is evident from the great number of petitions which were filed, that interest in women's activities is steadily grow- ing. The Cabaret has been tentatively set for the first part of December. The entertainment usually consists of a floor show, dancing, and other fea- tured programs. Spanish Prince Is Victim Of Robbery TORONTO, Nov. 4.- (/') - Jewels valued at $8,000 were stolen today from the hotel suite of former Prince Juan, of Spain, heir-presumptive to the abolished Spanish throne, and his bride of three weeks, the former Prin- cess Maria, of Bourbon-Sicily. The couple, on a honeymoon tour of +- --A -1 rn f linn onnr,1 No Nightgowns In Helen Newberry, a Fire Drill Shows{ Fire! So members of The Daily staff thoughtwhen they sawthe girls of Helen.Newberry dormitory run- ning out into the street in their pa- jamas at 11:55 p.m. yesterday. But The Daily staff was mistaken, because there was no fire. Neither were the Helen Newberry girls run- ning about in their nightwear just for the exercise. It was a fire drill. Quickly, and with only a few giggles, the girls, clad in gaudily hued sleeping suits, tripped out of the dor- mitory. They stood shivering around the street for a minute or two, and then, after reassuring the worried Daily reporter, sent over to investi- gate, that there really wasn't any fire, they tripped back in again. And they were lucky, for hardly had they gotten inside, when the rain, came down in sizeable quantities. Eye witnesses say there was not a nightdress in the lot. Villard ToGive Second Talky In Series Tonight' Italian Archeologist Also Tfo Speak On University Lecture Program Oswald Garrison Villard, noted~ publisher and journalist and Gilber Bagnini, director of Italian excava- tions in Egypt, will speak today on the prograA f thle University lecture series. Mr. Villard will speak on "The Present European Crisis" at 8 p.m. to- night in the Natural Science Audi- torium, and Mr. Bagnini is expected to discuss his findings at Teb-Tunis when he speaks at 4:15 p.m. this afternoon, also in the Natural Science Auditorium. TO ADDRESS LUNCHEON CLUBS Mr. Villard will mnake a special appearance at a joint meeting of Dean Joseph A. Bursley's two freshman luncheon clubs which will be held at noon today in the Union, according to an an- nouncement made last night. In order to give the members of both the Tuesday and Thurs- day noon clubs an opportunity to hear Mr. Villard, the two groups will meet this noon and there will be no meeting on Thursday, ac- cording to Dean Bursley. Vilgard has attracted quite some attention through his magazine wot and numerous books. He was born in Germany but came to this country and attended Harvard, Washington and Lee, and Lafayette College. Afte. receiving his degree from Lafayette, he became an assistant in American history at Harvard. His first newspaper position wa. with the Philadelphia Press, on which he was a reporter. He worked h . way up the journalistic ladder until i: 1918 he became editorial writer am president of the New York Evening Post. He resigned from the Post ir 1932 in order to join the Nation, with which he has been affiliated evei since. He is the grandson of William Lloyd Garrison, the famous abolition- mist. Mr. Bagnini was directly respon- sible for the discovery of a valuable collection of papyri at Teb-Tunis, Egypt, where he was in charge of a party searching for pottery articles, paintings, sculptures, and old coins He was educated in England, at- tending Oxford University, and has on several occasions lectured in Can- ada on the subjects of Greek, Latin, and Egyptology. Triangles Initiate Ten New Members Triangles, junior honorary engi- neering society, last night announced th rn -nf iniiann f n mow m. tn Women And Children Die As Planes Bomb Town In SouthernEthiopia Chieftains Plan Use Of Buried Hoards Italian Columns Penetrate Highlands With Makale As Objective (Copyrighted, 1935, by Associated Press) ADDIS ABABA, Nov. 4. -- (A) - An Italian air raid on the town of Gora- hei which the Ethiopian government described as the most furious yet suf- fered in Ethiopia, left 30 women and 15 children dead, it was announced officially today. Emperor Haile Selassie, beginning his sixth year of rule, was deeply af- fected by reports of the bombing Sat- urday, which the government stated caused greater casualties than earl- ier attacks on other cities including Aduwa in the north. Gorahei, in Ogaden province in southern Ethiopia, was said to be un- occupied by troops, as they were at the front. The women and children were said to have been killed while watering their cattle. One hundred of the cattle also were reported killed. Government officials stated they had no official reports of the Italian advance in the north toward Makale, but Emperor Haile Selassie expressed' great confidence that his warriors would defeat the Italian invaders. Ethiopia's plan to repel the inva- sion was increased by dozens of feudal chiefs after a vigorous plea by Tecle Hawariape, former Ethiopian minister to Paris who himself con- tributed 50,000 francs, about $2,250. Just back from Geneva where he represented Ethiopia before the League of Nations, Hawariape ad- dressed 10,000 warriors banqueting on raw meat yesterday. "What are you doing with your buried gold?" he asked. "Are you keeping it to give to the enemy? If you hoard it selfishly for yourselves 'while your country is undergoing the agonies of war you will soon become Italy's coolies." (Copyrighted, 1935, by Associated Press) ON THE MARCHING LINE WITH ITALIANS IN NORTHERN ETHI- OPIA, Nov. 4. - (P)- Machine guns of low-flying Fascist war planes and hot rifle fire from thousands of massed Ethiopians roared out near Makale today in the path of the fast advance of Italy's northern army. Behind the fighting planes the black shirts of Gen. Ruggero San- tini, one of four invading columns swept up the highland commanding Mai Anesti, 18 miles southeast of Hauzien and on toward much-wanted Makale, 20 miles deeper into the rock-bound heart of Ethiopia. Air reconnaisance reports to Italy military authorities at Asmara, Eri- trea, said Makale itself apparently was deserted by the Ethiopian troops and that crowds of inhabitants Mon- day raised their arms to the fliers and waved their white sheets as an invitation for the Fascists to occupy the city. Panel On Near East To Begin Series Sunday The first of a series of international panels will be held at 4:00 p.m. Sun- day at the Union. The panel, which, according to Prof.>J, Raleigh Nelson, Counselor to Foreign Students, has been arranged by the Turkish' stu- dents on the campus, will be an at- tempt to give an accurate and first- hand picture of social and economic reforms in the Near East. "These panels," said Professor Nel- son," are planned to provide the stu- dents of the eight foreign countries represented on the campus to ex- change ideas among themselves and the American students who are in- terested in foreign affairs." Three panels on the Near East have been planned for the period up to Christmas. and a series on the Far Kills Many; Army In North Advances Italian Air Raid Questions On Present Status Of Soviets Answered By Coffey By GUY M. WHIPPLE, JR. Certain important questions and answers relative to the present status of the Soviet Union, as expressed by Prof. Hobairt Coffey of the Law1 School, who has recently returned from a visit to Russia, in an informall talk before the National Student League last night in the Union: The question: Are Russian workers paid on an equalitarian basis? Professor Coffey: "They are not. Unskilled laborers earn approximate- ly 150 roubles a month, teachers 200 roubles, physicians 400 roubles, en- gineers 600 to 700 roubles, lawyers1 from 1,000 to 4,000." Q: Is there anything free in the Soviet Union? A: (by Professor Coffey) "You pay] for everything you get." Q: Do the Russian peoples seem3 content, well-dressed, clean? A: "In general, yes, they do. The Russian cities are much cleaner than feed them well, but many foodstuffs have been exported to pay for im- ports, and many Russians have taken from agronomy and transplanted to the factory to build up capital goods. The food is adequate, but variety is lacking." Q: What, approximately, is the Russian standard of living? A: "It is fairly close to the Amer- ican work relief level for the bulk of the workers." Q: What about food prices? A: "They are high." A: How much unemployment is there? A: "There is none." Q: Do the workers rule in Russia? A: "In a qualified sense. They have a large measure of local, or fac- tory, autonomy, but Communist Party, members are strategically placed to the end that the party doctrine per- vades all major decisions. The rule in Russia, is, again qualifiedly, dic-