The Weather tomuorr w; r1iing ternperatur e in northeast ouay; colider. C, 4r A6P A#OF 4ML-10 t r t a 1 0 t ~adli Radio Programs See Page Two for tonight's Radio Programs. VOL. XLVI No. 90 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 29, 1936 PRICE FIVE CENTS Robinson An swers Al Smith 'Unhappy Warrior' Scored In Senator's Radio Talk For Being Turncoat Smith's 'Harangue' Declared 'Sterile' Liberty Leaguers Branded Despoilers Of Nation's Oil, Coal Resources By EDWARD J. DUFFY WASHINGTON, Jan. 28. - (P) - The New Deal officially portrayed Al- fred E. Smith tonight as a turncoat "warring against his own people and against the men and women with whom he fought, shoulder to should- er, in the past." The spokesman, in reply to the Saturday speech impugning the Americanism and integrity of Roose- velt policies, was Smith's running mate in the 1928 campaign for the presidency - Senator Joseph T. Rob- inson of Arkansas. He said "the hour-long harangue before the mis-called Liberty League was barren and sterile, without a single constructive suggestion." "Governor Smith," he concluded in a national broadcast, "I have read you the record. You approved of NRA,' you approved farm relief, you urged federal spending for public works, you urged Congress to cut red tape and confer power on the execu- tive, you urged autocratic power for the President, and you exposed with merciless logic the bold cry of com- munism and socialism. 'The New Deal was the platform of the 'Happy Warrior.' "The policies of the Liberty League have become the platform of the 'unhappy warrior.'" Whether the rejoinder would impel further moves by Smith became an immediate topic of speculation. From his speech, capital leaders were still uncertain whether or how he would seek to "stop Roosevelt." He indicat- ed in New York he might answer Robinson. As had Secretary Ickes earlier in the day, the Senator reminded that Smith himself - in advancing social legislation in the past - had been accused of "socialism" much as he accused the President. Officers of the Liberty League ad- dressed by Smith, he said, "read like a roll call of the men who have de- spoiled the oil, coal and water power resources of this country." Mercury Rises As Cold Wave Finally Breaks High Pressure Area Split Causes Warmer Weather In This Section Weather forecasts have it that the week-old cold wave has at last spent its greatest force in this area, and is now ended-at least for the next 24 hours. The new cold spell which was pre- dicted for this week failed to mater- ialize yesterday as the mercury rose to comparatively balmy heights, bringing welcome relief to Ann Ar- bor and the entire state. A split in the high pressure area stretching from the Golf to Canada was given as the probable cause for the sudden rise in temperature. The lowest temperature recorded for the period from 7 p.m. Monday to 7 p.m. yesterday, according to the University Observatory Weather Bu- reau, was 10 degrees above zero, well above the 7.1 below mark reached the day before. The high point for the same per- iod, stood at 20 degrees above, a fairly comfortable temperature when compared with the sub- and near- zero weather which has prevailed for the last week. The temperature reported by the Observatory at 7 p.m. yesterday was 16.5 degrees above zero, and the av- erage temperature for the day was given as 15 above, relatively high as compared with the average tempera- ture for the day in other years. A steady barometer, hovering Gomberg Is To Retire After 48 Years Of DistinguishedService Noted Head Of Chemistry Soon To Be 70; Taught Here 43 Years By FRED WARNER NEAL "Moses Gomberg is one of the most honest, conscientious and unselfish men I know," wrote the late Prof. E. D. Campbell of the chemistry de- partment to the late Regent F. W. Fletcher of Alpena on Feb. 10, 1895. "If he is put in control of the depart- ment there will be harmony." This week Moses Gomberg, 70- year-old head of the chemistry de- partment and one of the world's lead- ing scientists, will modestly lay down his teaching and executive duties and devote the rest of his life to re- search with the elements he loves so well. He will continue to use his office and laboratory in the Chemistry Building. His retirement comes as a result of the fact that he reaches his 70th birthday next Saturday. Honors are pouring in to him from all sides this week, and still more are in the offing. Flees For Life Fifty-two years ago, the man who startled the scientific world with his discovery of trivalent carbon com- pounds, was forced to flee for his life from his native Russia because his father was accused of a political con- (jpirap~y. Aiving in the United States unable to speak English, after doing odd jobs in Chicago, where he finished his high school education, he came to the University of Mich- igan. He wanted to be a chemist. Today, his automatic retirement accepted by the Board of Regents, Professor Gomberg looks back over his 48-year career as a teacher and sci- entist with a smile and a sigh. The thing that has impressed him most on the Michigan campus is the great changes that have taken place. There were but 1,400 students enrolled when he came here as a freshman in 1886. The buildings were few and scattered over a small area. Students Changed Student attitudes have changed too, Professor Gomberg admits, and for the better. "After all," he smiles, '.we must have faith in .progress." He has given nearly 5,000 pupils their first lessons in organic chemistry. Professor Gomberg is modest to the point of reticence. "If you must write about me," he warned reporters yes- terday, "take it easy. Don't blow it up. No hooey." And his colleagues point out that he never talks about himself, his success in synthesizing mustard gas during the World war, or his famed discovery of triphenyl- menthyl- even to his classes-his colleagues pointed out. "Professor Gomberg is unique in that he is a good teacher as well as a good scientist," in the opinion of Prof. Chester S. Schoepfle, who suc- ceeds him as chairman of the chem- istry department. "It makes no dif- ference whether he is dealing with students or teachers, he is always con- siderate of the others' point of view and never loses his temper." Offers Rejected During his long career in the Uni- versity, Professor Gomberg has turned down offer after offer to teach at other institutions at a higher salary. But he likes it,here, he will tell you, and thinks he owes a lot to Michigan.! Professor Gomberg has refused to patent any of the many processes he has perfected. He has never earned a cent on any of them, and high on the list of those things he has dis- covered are the widely-sold anti- Reach Industrial Peak In December WASHINGTON, Jan. 28.-() - Industrial production in December reached the highest peak since the spring of 1930, the Federal Reserve Board reported in its monthly sum- mary of business and financial con- ditions. The board's seasonally adjusted in- dex, which takes account of the sea- sonal decline that usually occurs in December, advanced from 98 per cent of the 1923-25 average in November to 103 per cent in December. "As in other months during the last half of 1935," the report said, "the rise in the index was due in large part to increases in output of durable manufacturers, particularly iron and steel and automobiles." Two Students Wounded By Police In Cairo Riots CAIRO, Jan. 28. - (A") - Two more strikin- iiniversity students were re- 'Conscientious, Unselfish' MOSES GOMBERG freeze fluid for automobiles and sol- vents for automobile lacquers. The story is told that when he first entered the University, he wanted to take physics. To do this, he was in- formed, he had to have trigonometry - a subject he had never taken. "All right," said young Moses, and without another word went away. In three days he returned, asked to take a final examination in trigonometry. Incre- dulous, the professors allowed him to take the test. But they were fooled. He passed it, and with a high grade at that. Professor Gomberg began his career as a teacher during his junior year here - in 1888, when he was made ,Continued on P se 6) Ethiopians And Italians Report New Victories Rome Asserts Capturedj Hospital Units Contained Munitions, War Drums The Ethiopian War Office reported Tuesday that surprise attacks on Italian forces on the Northern Front took the lives of 66 Fascist soldiers. A Rome communique claimed a new victory for the invaders. Patrols of Ras Seyoum's troops won their engagements at Geuralta and Agama, the Ethiopian government said, adding that the Italians were continuing an artillery bombardment on defending columns near Makale. Capture of five trucks of a Swedish hospital unit, assertedly loaded with 27 cases of munitions, was reported in the Rome communique. Marshal Pietro Badoglio, commander of the Italian forces in the North, said the trucks also carried flags and war drums of Ras Desta Demtu, Ethiopian chieftain. Marshal Badoglio predicted a fur-j ther advance into disputed territory during the approaching rainy sea-I son as the Fascists pushed deeper into the mountainous Tembien sec- tor. Hemorrhage Proves Fatal To O.K.Allen Governor Of Louisiana Expires Within An Hour After Being Stricken U. S. Senate Seat Again Left Vacant Long's Political Heir Had Been Vindicated In State Election Last Week BATON ROUGE, La., Jan. 28.--('P) - Gov. Oscar Kelly Allen, who rose to power with Huey P. Long and in- herited the political leadership left by the late Senator, died today of a cerebral hemorrhage. Apparently in excellent health and spirits, the fifty-five-year-old Gov- ernor and senator-designate to fill the unexpired term of Long was stricken suddenly as he prepared to leave the Executive Mansion for his offices in Louisiana's skyscraper State House. He died within an hour, his wife and two of his children at his bed- side. The news spread quickly, shocking the State with the knowledge that the second of the two men who helped build a political empire with- out comparison in American history, has passed. Like Huey Long, Allen often was the center of political tempest. Only last week he figured largely in sweep- ing into office a new State adminis- tration in a landslide victory which followers of Long declared a "vin- dication" of his policies. Allen's death automatically made Lieut. Gov. James A. Noe, of Monroe, a high lieutenant in the Long-Allen political organization, the chief ex- ecutive, but again left vacant the United States Senate seat whicht Long occupied before he was assas- sinated. The vacancy caused immediate concern to the Long faction's chief- tains: The leaders raced for Baton Rouge from all parts of the State as soon as the Governor's death had been announced. A candidate must be produced for the general election and the State Democratic Central Committee has the legal power to designate a nom- inee. The greatest political loss which the Long organization will feel from the death of the Governor probably will be the loss of his ability to plac- ate warring leaders. Allen was not as effective as Long but he was the only one who could deal with lieuten- ants when they became whipped into fury over their thwarted ambitions. The passing of Allen removed an- other outstanding opponent of the Rooseveltian New Deal, which Sen- ator Long fought with biting vigor. On his nomination to the senator- ship, Allen had announced that the main objective of his going to Wash- ington would be to demand a Con- gressional investigation of the dicta- tor's fatal shooting. "I hope they make me chairman of the committee, so that justice will be done," he said. Britisher Claims M.P.'s May Start Chronic Drinking LONDON, Jan. 28.- (') --An ac- cusation that parliament is "almost the easiest place in which to become a chronic drinker" has caused Eng- lish legislators to whisper among themselves. Herbert Morrison, peppery Social-t ist leader of the London County Council, is responsible. His remarks, contained in an open letter to the Socialist weekly Forward, are intend- ed as a warning to new members of Parliament. He suggests that newI "M.P.'s" spend more time in the Li-I brary and less in the bar. "We must not exaggerate the evil," writes Morrison. "Not many M. P.'s go under. But every party in the House of Commons has had its few cases - some of them promising per-' sons with considerable potentialities for good public service. "But the habit grows. A speech in the House becomes impossible with- out a stimulant. The brain is only normal when its owner is artifically stimulated. The bar or the smoking room sees more of him and the li- brary less. "Steadily - d e s p i t e occasional bursts of inebriated 'brilliance'- the brain is underminded, courage fails, constructive thought fades. The man that was is dead. "Yet it was not altogether his brain to poison. It was also his constitu- ents' brain, a brain in the service of the people." Smith's Speech Funeral Dirge, Claims Borah, Says Election Will Involve A 'Living Platform' Int BrooklynAddress, NEW YORK, Jan. 28. - (') -< Senator William E. Borah of Idaho, referring to-Alfred E. Smith's Libertyj League speech, told a meeting of par-i tisans for his presidential nomina- tion tonight the election "will nots revolve around a dead platform, but a living platform." "Last Saturday night I heard theI most pathetic funeral oration overE the dead body of the 1932 platform," the Senator said in an address at Shrine Hall in Brooklyn. He called upon the Republicanj party to send instructed delegates to the national convention to frame a platform "as close to the people and1 issues as possible." "Policies and principles necessary to take care of the people as a whole" he held necessary to regain the G.O.P. from "extraordinary" loss of influence in national affairs.1 He also touched on the neutrality question. The former chairman of the sen- ate's foreign relations committee said, this country's foreign policy should be completely divorced from "the po- litical embroilments of other nations." "You can't be neutral and try to stop a foreign war," he said. On domestic politics, he expressed the opinion the country normally was Republican. Wheaton To Debate Women's Team Here Three women students represent- ing Wheaton College of Wheaton, Ill., will debate a Varsity women's debating team at 9 a.m. -Thursday, it was announced yesterday by Arthur E. Secord, varsity debating coach. The debate will be held in the Adel- phi Room, 4203 Angell Hall, and no decision will be given. The question for the debate is, "Re solved: That the United States Should Support the League of Na- tions in the Enforcement of Sanc- tions Provided for in the Covenant of the League." The three women who will debate for Michigan are, in order of speaking, Barbara Lutts, '36, Lillian Tollhorst, '38, and Winifred Bell, '36. According to Mr. Secord, no admission will be charged. Hoffman Asserts Condon's Conduct Warrants Inquiry TRENTON, N. J., Jan. 28. - (P) -- Gov. Harold G. Hoffman revived to- day -the prospect that Dr. John F. In llinois Visit By Screen Beauty To Agitate Male Hearts Fifty masculine hearts at the Al- pha Tau Omega fraternity house are palpitating alarmingly. The agita- tion is expected to reach a peak come Thursday dinner. The cause of it all is five feet plus of blond, curved beauty named Betty Grable, who hails from Hollywood and is a movie actress en- gaged to Jackie Coogan. Miss Grable will fly to Ann Arbor from Detroit, Thursday, in theplane of a member of the fraternity to grace the dinner table of the ATO's Miss Grable is a relative of a mem- ber of the fraternity and is making a personal appearance at'a Detroit theatre. No bids will be issued for the affair. 5-Year Plan Is Successful, Adler Asserts But 'Caste System' Has Arisen And Standards Of Living Are Low, He Says The picture of a dictatorially-ruled, highly-armed Russia, its Five Year Plan "unquestionably successful," while its poor cannot afford much of the plenty it produces, was painted last night by Philip Adler, globe- trotting correspondent of the Detroit News, in an address before members of Sigma Delta Chi, national hon- orary journalism fraternity. Mr. Adler highly praised the So- viet's Five-Year Plan for obtaining its objective of economic reconstruc- tion, although he insisted a "caste. system" had crept in under the Com- munist rule. He talked of efficient factories producing commodities at high gear and of the average family earnings of 125 rubles per month trying to live on a minimum sub- sistence budget of 400 rubles. The arts - especially drama - are in an excellent state in Russia, ac- cording to Mr. Adler, although he said "proletarian art" amounted to little. Mr. Adler returned last year from a news hunting trip in the Far East, during which he spent nearly a year in Ruusia. He pointed out that Russia justifies her hugenmilitary organization and high military expenditures by re- garding herself as in a state of con- tinual war with capitalistic nations. The danger of war in the Far East is "greater than most people know," he held, asserting that the clash comes between Russia's age-old search for an outlet to the sea and Japan's need for expansion. It is generally held by newspaper correspondents in the area, as well asbyhimself, Mr. Adler declared, that, in event of war, other nations cannot help but be drawn in. Despite his remarks about a "caste system" in the Soviet Republic, he denied that Russia is going back to capitalism. The Russian govern- ment does not believe in race and re- ligious antagonism, he said, believing that it diverts the proletariat from the real issue. "But nevertheless," he added, "the officials do not hesi- tate to convince the United States that she should aid Russia, as white man to white man," in their fight against the yellow soldiers of Nippon. In answer to a question asked him after his address, Mr. Adler firmly asserted his belief that Josef Stalin, secretary of the Communist Party, ruled the country with an iron hand more absolute than that of Mussolini or Hitler. "There is no question but that his word is law," he said. Woman Heads Dog i Sled Into Unknown SKAGWAY, Alaska, Jan. 28. - (P) - Adventure-seeking Mary Joyce battled Yukon snow trails today on the second leg of a hazardous 1,000- mile dog team journey from Juneau to Fairbanks. The diminutive twenty-seven-year- Franks Co-murderer Is Fatally Slashed With Razor InFight Attack Occurs In Small Schoolroom Attempt to Save His Life By Blood Transfusions Is Unsuccessful JOLIET, Ill., Jan. 28. - (P) - Slashed 22 times by a razor in the hands of an enraged fellow convict, Richard Loeb, 30, co-perpetrator of the "thrill slaying" of Bobby Franks in 1924, was killed today in State- ville penitentiary. James Day, 28, serving a term for larceny, confessed the killing of Loeb, State's Attorney Will McCabe of Will County said, and blamed it to Loeb's insistence in pursuing him over a long period with improper advances. Sullen at first, Day refused to dis- cuss the case except to tell Warden Joseph Ragen, it was "just a fight." He died at 4:05 p.m. Detroit time. His jugular vein had been severed and prison officials said that he had been gashed badly in the shoulders and abdomen as well. Family Doctor Called "I'll make it," the wounded Loeb told the warden in his only comment before he succumbed. The prison physician was joined by Loeb's fam- ily doctor and a surgeon from Mich- ael Reese Hospital in Chicago in the vain effort to save his life. He had suffered heavy loss of blood before Guard Captains James Humphrey and J. O. Johnson rushed into the small room off the main prison where .the attack occurred. They had heard Loeb screaming. The room was being prepared for use as headquarters of the prison cor- respondence school in which Loeb and Leopold were active. Loeb witnesses said, was followed into the room by Day, who started a fist fight. When Loeb appeared to be winning the fight Day whipped out the razor and started wielding it wildly. When the guards rushed in they had to pull Day off Loeb. Day held the blood-stained razor in his hand. Blood Transfusion Given Officers described Loeb as "slashed to pieces." Transfusion was futilely attempted. Blood was provided by another convict. Day entered the institution in Feb- ruary, 1932, and had won a good con- duct rating which would have made him eligible for parole in August, 1937. He had been aiding Loeb and Leopold in preparing and marking papers in the prison school. Coroner E. A. Kingston ordered an inquest for 10 a.m. tomorrow. War- den Ragen said that Day would be held on a charge of murder. Charges In Hewitt Case AreDelayed SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 28. --01) A legal technicality today prevented issuance of warrants charging may- hem to three persons accused by Miss Ann Cooper Hewitt of duping her into a sterilization operation. The warrants named Miss He- witt's mother, Mrs. Maryon Cooper McCarter and Dr. T. E. Tillman and Samuel G. Boyd. Objection was voiced by Dr. Till- man's attorney, who contended that the statute under which the proceed- ings were undertaken had been amended. Miss Hewitt recently sued her mother and the physicians for $500,- 000 damages. She has refused to sign criminal charges in the case and the proceedings were undertaken by the District Attorney under a little- used statute which will be studied further before action on the warrants is taken. Grand Trunk Railroad Gets Operation Permit WASHINGTON, Jan. 28.-(R)- The Grand Trunk Western railroad Richard Loeb Slain By Fellow Convict Prison Reliable sources at Djibouti, French ROWLAND PLEA FAILS Somaliland, said that Ethiopian HARRISON, Mich., Jan. 28. - (ip) priests had formally protested against -Circuit Judge Ray Hart denied Emperor Haile Selassie's orders for Tuesday afternoon a motion for a new the churchmen to accompany grain trial in the case of Mrs. Elizabeth shipments to the front. Rowland, 34 years old, convicted re- They asked to be allowed to stay at cently on a charge of conspiring with home to bolster loyalty to residents her husband in the drowning of her of their districts. two children. Faculty Members Take Lead In Forming Lincoln League By CLAYTON HEPLER University professors and faculty members have taken the lead in the formation of the Lincoln League, de- signed to aid the Republican party in its forthcoming election campaign. Expressing themselves as dissatis- fied with the present national Demo- cratic administration and determined not to play' a passive role but to take a more active part in electing both local and national officeholders, Prof. Ralph W. Aigler of the Law School, Prof. Jesse S. Reeves of the political science department and Prof. John G. Winters, director of the fine arts division, together with Reardon Pierson1 .Tmes Tnglis and other nromi- support to the "platform for support of constitutional government," while most of the applications from Uni- versity circles have not yet been filed. An organization meeting of the League was held last Thursday night in the council chambers of the City Hall. At that time it was made clear by Professor Reeves that the League was making its appeal to both Re- publicans and Democrats who are not in sympathy with the present New Deal policies. The principles adopted at that time, drawn up by Professor Reeves, pledge all members to the best of their ability to "preserve, pro- tect. and defend the Constitution of the United States, to the end that this