The Weather Partly cloudy in south, cloudy in north, somewhat colder to- day; generally fair tomorrow. L Sir gan AIaNj Editorials Corporation Cushions... 'Only A Little Jap' ... VOL. XLVI No. 124 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 25, 1936 PRICE FIVE CENTS DeathToll s Raised By Storms Fatalities In Flood Area Increased To 177 After MississippiTornado Ohio Flood Waters Gradually Receding Dust Rolls Into Mid-West, Darkening Chicago And Grand Rapids Skies (By The Associated Press) With storms increasing the death toll in Midwest, Southern and East- ern states, the fury of the flood-ram- paging Ohio lessened last night as the river swept over more lowlands down- stream from Cincinnati. The death list, after a week of wind and flood, mounted to 177. The Ohio neared its crest at Cin- cinnati but, unlike the inundation at Pittsburgh and Wheeling, failed to reach the business district. This was true, also, in river towns nearby. f Upstream the river was either level- ing off or receding. Downstream, it was at flood stage along the Indiana boundary. Scores of families, given ample warning, left lowland homes. Rivermen expected no widespread loss, as compared to 1913 or other years. Plan Flood Control To control future floods in the Ohio Valley, business men from Pennsyl- vania, Ohio, Kentucky, and West Vir- ginia opened a flood-control congress in Gallipolis.} Tornado-like winds and storms, sweeping up the Mississippi Valley took four lives, four in Missouri and one in Memphis, Tenn. Hail and wind wrought considerable damage to crops and property. Dust storms, swirling into the Great Lakes area from the Southwest darkened Chicago and Grand Rapids. .Heavy rains in -the Middle West and East brought new fears of flood. In the West, tributary streams of the Mississippi were rising. In New York, the Oswego River was swelling above record stages around Syracuse. Near Portland, Me., the Sacco River burst a dyke and swept away public buildings in the village of Hollis. Illinois Romes Jolted To Talk On Peace I I Mary Andrewl Elected Head Of Assembly Jesperson New Secretary Of Independent Women; Heitsch Vice-President To Be Inaugurated At Banquet April 6 New Officers Prominent In Assembly; Chosen By Representatives' Vote Mary Andrew, '37, of Houghton, was elected president of the Assembly, organization for independent women, at a meeting of the Assembly yester- day in the hostess room of the League. At the same time, Mary Ellen Heitsch, '37, of Pontiac, was chosen vice-presi- dent and Helen Jesperson, '37, of Pe- By Action Of Executive Committee For Misconduct During Hell Week Beta BU LLETIN Theta Pi House Is Suspended Student Alliance Denies Charge Of Radicalism Made By V.F. W. TOYOHIKO KAGAWA Famed Nippon KPeace Leader To Talk Today Kagawa, Japanese Liberal, Is Here To Open Series Of Social Lectures A public lecture on "Christian Co- operatives and World Peace" and a special student forum will constitute Toyohiko Kagawa's program on his first visit to Ann Arbor today. Kaga- wa is being sponsored by the Martin Loud lectureship fund. The public address will be given at 4:15 p.m. today in Hill Auditorium, and the student meeting will be held at 7:30 p.m. in, the Union, Kagawa has been active in manyE different fields of Japanese social, ec- onomic and political life. He has come to be recognized as a leading man in the cooperative movement, and to show the work that his coop- eratives have accomplished he often toskey, was named secretary-treas- urer. Miss Andrew will be officially in- augurated into the presidency at the Installation Banquet, April 6, at the League and will assume her duties along with the other new officers at the next meeting of the Assembly which will be called late in April. All three women have been prom- inent in campus activities. Miss An- drew is assistant chairman of the Junior Girls Play, "Sprize." She has also participated in the Sophomore Cabaret and freshmen project. Last fall she acted as an orientation ad- visor and served on the music com- mittee for the Assembly Ball. She also holds the position of secretary of the house council' at Mosher Hall. She is a member of Wyvern, junior women's honor society. Miss Heitsch, a transfer from Lake Forest School, Lake Forest, Ill., was this year's general chairman of the Assembly Ball in which capacity she led the grand march. Last year she served on the publicity committee for the affair. She worked on the tick- et committee for both the Sophomore Cabaret and Junior Girls Play. Miss Heitsch has been active at the League, serving as chairman of the League Musical under the theatre arts group as well as an orientation leader. She is chairman of activities at Mosher Hall and treasurer of the Mosher House Council. Miss Jesperson has been connected with the Assembly for two years. As a sophomore, she worked on the ticket committee for the assembly banquet while this year she was chairman of the chaperon committee for the As- sembly Ball. She is also a member of the Assembly Board. Jury Again Fails lo (A)?lvJ(1 Laiiisoii SAN JOSE, Calif., March 24.-(, P -- A determined prosecution failed again today to ccnvict David A. Lain- son, former Stanford University press official, of murdering his wife, Elaine. A jury of five women and seven men was discharged this afternoon after reporting it was hopelessly dead- locked, 9 to 3 for conviction, after ten ballots. It had deliberated 36 hours since Friday. Harold Oberg, rancher member of the jury, said three women held out for acquittal. The black-haired young defendant appeared shocked when foreman Mil- ton Raymond reported the jury stood 9 to 3 for conviction. The heavy rain at Cumberland, wears a suit produced by his own1 Md., similar to the downpour preced- organization at a cost of only a few ing last week's havoc, caused a rise in dollars. the Potomac River of more than a foot in a few hours and nearly two A novel aspect is given to Kagawa's feet in *ills Creek, through the Cen- present tour of the United States. He ter of the city. is preaching world peace, whereas the A land fault over a flooded aban- Japanese nation has been pictured doned coal mine at Johnston City, during the last few years as being Ill., moved numerous houses from imperialistic and warlike. Kagawa their foundations, broke a city gas has shown his fearlessness against main and cracked pavements. The official opposition to his programs town was crippled economically with many times, however, and he has beenI its principal active coal mine flooded. exiled from Japan on several occa- The Gallipolis conference was called sions only to be caled back to his by the directors of The Ohio Valley native Nippon by popular demand. He Water Conservation and Flood Con- will discuss the military and political trol Congress. situation in that arena of world con- Already bearing the approval of tention-the Far East. United States army engineers, the During the winter of 1930-31, the' flood control program of the congress city of Tokio was in dark straits. De- would cost some $237,000,000. spite the fact that $5,000,000 was be- _ -- 'ing spent by-the city annually for re- lief, the welfare bureau was not Student W itness reaching everybody and was perform- ing inefficiently. The mayor of Tokio I e ii disregarded all political precedent aanappointed Kagawa to the lead- ership of the social welfare bureau. M urder -a h Ct The latter took matters largely in 1 (Continued on Paae 2) MONTREAL, March 24. - () - The Detroit Red Wings and Montreal Maroons were locked in a scoreless tie at the end of three regular periods and five overtimes in the first game of the play-off series of the National Hockey League championship tonight. They began playing on a "sud- den death" overtime basis with the decision hanging upon the first goal. Noted Educator' To Speak Here At Convocation Honor Students Will Hear Address By Swarthmore President May 1 The date of the 1936 Honors Con- vocation was set yesterday for May 1, and Dr. Frank Aydelotte, president of Swarthmore (Pa.) College, was an- nounced as speaker. This year's Honors Convocation, at which all honor students in the Uni- versity will be feted, will be the 13th annual convocation, Dean Joseph A. BuTsley said. It will be held in Hill Auditorium. The selection of the speaker was made by a faculty committee headed by Dean Bursley More than 200 students elected to honorary scholastic societies will at- tend, be given seats of honor, and have their names on the program. An occaion of note, the Convoca- tion always hears an outstanding edu- cational leader. Last year, at the Convocation held April 26, Dr. Henry Sturgis Dennison, president of the Dennison Manufacturing Co., was speaker. Dr. Aydelotte was graduated from the University of Indiana, where he was an All-American tackle, and re-' ceived his master's degree from Har- vard. He was awarded a Rhodes' scholarship, and studied at Oxford' from 1905 to 1907. After several years' experience as a professor of English at several colleges, he was made pres- ident of Swarthmore College in 1921. He has also been president of the Association of American Colleges,I trustee on the Carnegie Foundation for Advancement of Teaching, a mem- ber of the Institute of Advance Study, and of the World Peace Foundation. Who's A Gay Dog? Gargoyle Readers Will Select Gayest Michigan's gayest dog, sartorially speaking, will be elected by purchas- ers of the March Gargoyle, on sale tomorrow, it was announced today by Norman Williamson, '36, business manager of the publication. Ballots will be included with the issue, and State Street clothiers will donate prizes which will comprise a complete new spring outfit for the winner. A baseball player, a drunk and sev- eral other heterogeneous objects will be laid out in a helter-skelter plan to' form a figure of a co-ed-justifiable, the editors think, because what else does a woman look like but a lot of things thrown together?-for the cover. "Things We Don't Like" will be a new feature. Drawings rather than photographs have been selected as better methods of presenting the lat- est styles. Caricatures will again be used in "Preposterous People." Ben Starr, '37, is the author of a short story. Details of a $150 prize contest and a cigarette-rolling contest will also be announced in this issue. Harmony In Party Sought By Landon TOPEKA, Kans., March 24. - (1P) -I Local Veterans To Attend Butler's Lecture After Commander's Probe By FRED WARNER NEAL Despite charges of members of the Veterans of Foreign Wars that the Students' Alliance is Communistic, the V.F.W. will be present with their colors at the Students' Alliance-spon- sored lecture of Maj .-Gen. Smedley D. Butler Thursday night. Floyd Stoeckle, commander of the local Veterans of Foreign Wars post, declared last night that he had "in- vestigated to my satisfaction that the Students' Alliance is all right." But Floyd B. Markey, another member of the post, asserted that he believes the Students' Alliance is "radical and Communistic," and that "it is merely the National Student League under different colors." Mr. Markey held that Mr. Stoeckle is making a mistake. "I'm convinced Fuehrer Rejects, Hague Tribunal; Troops Remain Settlement Of Rhine Valley Dispute Blocked; League Adjourns As Nazi Arrives LONDON, March 24. - (P)-Eu- rope's crisis was thrown into a new and more complicated muddle tonight when Adolf Hitler refused outright to take his troopsrout of the Rhine- land and rejected the Hague Court as a tribunal. Der Fuehrer's answer to the Lo- carno program, made public a few' hours after the Council of the League of Nations suddenly adjourned, left' the Rhineland dispute unsettled and with a long-drawn-out stalemate in prospect. Joachim Von Ribbentrop, Hitler's special ambassador, arrived in London with a personal message to the British government from the German dic- tator just as the council broke up- an act which was interpreted in in- formed circles as a direct rebuff to Hitler for his long delay in answering the Locarno proposals. Although the Locarno demands were emphatically rejected, the Reich said that on March 31, two days after the German Reichstag election, it would "place at the disposal of the Royal British government a compre- hensive statement of its position, to- gether with its positive proposals." The Council will reconvene in Gen- eva some time after the German and French elections. Anthony Eden, British foreign sec- retary, was left with new difficulties in conciliating Franco-German differ- ences, but League circles seemed agreed that the immediate danger of European hostilities had been avoided. A spokesman for the Geman del- egation said that the British govern- ment's white paper outlining the Lo- carno proposals is "absolutely dead." they're a Communist organization," he declared, "and I'm going tosrun down the facts." The Veterans of Foreign Wars, Mr. Markey pointed out, are opposed to Communism, are against war "but believe the way to prevent war is to arm to the teeth." General Butler, fierce Marine war- rior, now retired, appears to be a converted pacifist. He is speaking on "War as a Racket," being spon- sored by the Students' Alliance, the program of which is "Peace, Free- dom, Security and Equality." Officials of the Students' Alliance laughed at the charge that they are Communists or merely another Na- tional Student League. "We have around 75 members," Herbert Weis- inger, Grad., president, "and only 25 per cent of them belonged to either the National Student League or the Student League for Industrial De- mocracy. It is absolutely incorrect to say we are Communistic. We are not." Weisinger's statement that the or- ganization was not Communistic was backed by Max Wender, '36E, a mem- ber of the late N.S.L., chairman of arrangements for General Butler's address, and was corroborated by the office of the Dean of Students. Mr. Stoeckle also said Dean Bursley told him that the Students' Alliance is not Communistic. The Veterans of Foreign Wars, ac- cording to Commander Stoeckle, will be present on the Hill Auditorium platform the night of the Butler speech, but, he added, "we are doing it out of respect to General Butler, who is a V.F.W. member, more than anything else." U. S. Is Prepared To Indict O'Shea In Detroit Fraud Officials Complete Plans Of Case Against Alleged Tyler Accomplice DETROIT, March 24.-(G)-Federal officials completed preparaition of their $349,000 fund misapplication case against James J. O'Shea today as his wife expressed her belief he is "innocent of wrongdoing." Harold H. Reinecke, head of the Detroit bureau of investigation of the Department of Justice said "we have all the facts and figures neces- sary for an indictment" as well as a list of witnesses to appear before the Federal grand jury Thursday. Mrs. O'Shea, in a formal statment, announced her intention to "stand by" her husband and to "get him all the assistance possible." O'Shea, vice-president of the Na- tional Bank of Detroit, is held at the Milan Detention Farm pending the jury's action, upon the government charges that he misapplied $349,000 of city trust funds on deposit at the bank, aided and abetted by Harry M. Tyler, assistant city budget direct- or, whose death March 12 was pro- nounced a suicide by police, Interfraternity Council's Executive Committee Has House Closed 5 Months Specific Offense Is Not Mentioned May Reopen In October If Evidence Is Shown Of ProperConditions By THOMAS E. GROEHN The local chapter of Beta Theta Pi was suspended from the campus for a five-month period yesterday by the Executive Committee of the In- terfraternity Council for misconduct in carrying on their Hell Week. The house must close April 1 and may reopen Sept. 1 on the following conditions: "The said organization shall be reopened and remain open after Sept. 1, 1936 only upon submis- sion to the Executive Committee of the Interfraternity Council on or be- fore Oct. 15, 1936, of evidence of in- ternal conditions satisfactory to the said Executive Committee and to the national organization of Beta Theta Pi Fraternity." The action was taken only after the Committee conferred in their session yesterday with G. Herbert Smith, general secretary of Beta Theta Pi, who came here for the in- vestigation. Refuse To Comment IMembers of the Executive Commit- tee andsNorman Williamson, '36, president of the fraternity, refused last night to specify what the "con- clusive evidence" was of "certain Hell Week practices which are contrary to the best interests of Michigan fra- ternities as a group." Williamson also declined to state whether the fraternity would take ad- vantage of their right of appeal to the University discipline committee. Although the rumor could not be substantiated, it is believed that action was taken against the house because of Hell Week practices inside the house and not for activities outside the house, such as a "long hike." Climaxes Investigation Thexaction against Beta Theta P climaxed a seven-day investigation by the Executive Committee into the Hell Week practices of nine houses. Other fraternities called before the Committee during the probe were Phi Kappa Psi, Sigma Chi, Sigma Nu, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Theta Del- ta Chi, Alpha Kappa Lambda, Psi Upsilon and Zeta Psi. Acting with the same mystery that has characterized their whole inves- tigation, the Committee refused to state whether any of the above men- tioned houses had been exonerated as yet and whether further disciplinary action would be brought against any of the houses which were found to have violated the Interfraternity Council Hell Week regulations. The Hell Week of the Beta Theta Pi fraternity was held before the Interfraternity Council passed their new regulations on Hell Week, Wed- nesday, Feb. 26, but the Committee ruled that it has power to take any action for the better interest of fra- ternities and that the Hell Week of the offending fraternity violated the general criteria for the probationary period set up last spring by the Inter- fraternity Council. Investigated Before It was the second time in three years that Beta Theta Pi has been called before the fraternity commit- tee for investigation. In 1934 their Hell Week was investigated but the case was dropped because of "insuffi- cient evidence." It was also in 1934 that the pledge class of the same fraternity "struck" during Hell Week and refused to be initiated until an agreement on the practices to be used during the pe- riod could be made between the ac- tives and pledges. That agreement was effected. Beta Theta Pi was founded here in 1845 and is second only to Chi Psi fraternity as the oldest fraternity on the campus. It was founded nation- ally in 1837. The Executive Committee is com- posed of five student fraternity mem- James A. Akers, '38, a customer in Conlin & Wetherbee's clothing store a year ago when Officer Clifford "Sid" Stang was murdered there in a hold- up, yesterday morning made the third positive identification of Wil- liam Padgett, alias "Shorty Hayden," now held by Ann Arbor police, as one of the three men who engineered the daylight robbery and fled after killing Stang. Hayden had previously been identi- fied by William Conlin and Herbert Wetherbee, proprietors of the store, who, with Akers, were the only ones in the store when holdup men en- tered it March 21, 1935. During the holdup Stang entered, unaware of the armed robbers. One of the men jumped on his back, seized his gun, and shot the officer through the back; both men then fled in a car driven by a third man in the party. None of the three men who have identified Hayden as one of the rob- bers have said that he was the killer, W. S. Knudsen Voices Optimism In Speaking Before Engineers By JENNY PETERSEN If recovery i, not actually here,I conditions are definitely on the up- grade, William S. Knudsen, execu- tive vice-president of General Motors, said last night after addressing the Engineering Council smoker in the Union. e eoffered the New York Stock Exchange reports for the first two months of this year and the previous three years as evidence that recovery is "just around the corner," pointing out that there has been steady im- provement shown each year, and pro- phesied that there would be still greater imp-jrovement in the next two years. Asked whether he was in favor of President Roosevelt's proposed tax on fined an engineer as one who "has developed the science of formula into the science of things." In pursuance of this advice, he urged engineers to work in a machine shop for several years immediately following their graduation. The necessity of knowing what others have done in the past and starting where they left off was em- phasized by Mr. Knudsen. He re- called Thomas Edison's laboratory where schemes that never material- ized were carefully catalogued so that in testing a similar idea effort could be saved by utilizing the experience gained in the first tests. Organization, he said, was the most important factor in a large business. "It's good to have competition," Mr. D amda Phi Data Sorority Rates BMOC's ByTheir Dating Value By BETTY STRICKROOT part on personality. Especially pop- Although dating bureaus have never ular is the one who is tactful and yet been successful on Michigan's cam- amusing. A good dancer finds a high pus, you girls can now check up on rating in most everyone's estimation. the rating of any of your blind dates. While handsome features are almost We refer you to the newly organized negligible, a well dressed appearance campus society, Damda Phi Data, counts a great deal. Consideration The society is composed of a diver- and promptness are favorable char- sified group of women who claim to acteristics. represent the campus spirit. They Conceit and rudeness bring forth conceived the idea of rating the the greatest disapproval. The per- various B.M.O.C.'s according to their son who loses hig temper easily can dating value. After much debate, be sure that he will be down farther the following system of rating was on the list. Discreet drinking is not! devised: A, smooth; B, O.K.; C, pass condemned. in a crowd; D, semigoon, and E, spook. Copies of this unusual list can be I