THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, APRIL 1, 1936 Hauptmann Is Saved By Last Minute Action Kimberling Complies With Grand Jury To Approve Execution Reprieve 48 Hours Granted Jury Reported Examining New Angles On Murder Of Lindbergh Baby (Continued from Page this statement to Attorney General David T. Wilentz, chief of the prose- cution staff at the Flemington trial: '"Mr. Wilentz, with my dying breath, I swear by God, that you convicted an innocent man." The letter was made public by the governor's office two hours after the execution had been postponed. The decision of Justice Trenchard reached after an hour and 20 minutes of argument by Fisher and Wilentz, left Hauptmann virtually without hope, although he had consistently said, while protesting his "innocence," that "something will happen" to save him. Few persons, who had followed the case through all its legal phases, believed the Bronx carpenter had a chance. It Zied's Pardon Ironical It 'was even remarked ironically that he seemed doomed to be deprived of a few extra minutes of life by the fact that Charles Zied, who was to have preceded him to the chair, re- ceived a 30-day reprieve from Gover- nor Hoffman later in the afternoon. That meant that Hauptmann would march alone and probably on the stroke of 8 p.m. into the death cham- ber. He had wept bitterly in the morn- ing. He had refused food. From Fisher he received some consolation, and from his spiritual adviser, the Rev. John Matthiesen, and from a former spiritual comforter, the Rev. D. G. Werner, he had received further solace. His wife had written him a note: "I love you and I will always love you. I will continue to hope and you must, too." But neither actually hoped for much. Mrs. Hauptmann had bought herself a mourning veil in the after- noon. Wife May Visit Him But she looked forward late to- night to another visit with her hus- band tomorrow. She asked Fisher if she might see Hauptmann. Fisher said he assumed so since only on the last day -now set for Thursday - do prison regulations forbid a visit. Even any action the grand jury, suddenly convened to consider the Wendel case, might take seemed re- mote, although Col. Kimberling had announced he would halt tonight's ex- cution should an indictment be re- turned. The grand jury- remained in session long after its action had saved Haupt- mann. Fisher said he told Hauptmann only in ageneral way about the reason for the 48-hour delay and about the Wen- del case. Governor Hoffman, through his press aide, William S. Conklin, was quick to disclaim any connection with the grand jury's action. Wilentz Non-Committal Neither Attorney General Wilentz, nor Prosecutor Anthony M. Hauck, Jr., of Hunterdon County, (Flemington), Hauptmann's prosecutors, would make any immediate comment. Both have fought vigorously to sent Hauptmann to the chair. "My writing is not for fear of los- ing my life," Hauptmann wrote the governor. "This is in the hands of God, it is his will. I will go gladly, it means the end of my tremendous suffering. Only in thinking of my dear wife and my little boy, that is breaking my heart." All day the atmosphere, of tense- ness, presaging death behind the3 brown prison walls, had hung over the neighborhood. As twilight came knots of persons gathered at the roped off sections of the street. Squads of state troopers, prison guards and city police patrolled the streets. Only persons with passes were admitted to the street facing the prison. When night fell searchlights shone from the guard towers on the walls. Prisoners, dark against the light of their cells, could be seen from tho street, and their voices came down to thos~e who waited, a confusion of sounds. When at Calkins - Fletcher On State and Packard - Bruno Face To Face With Death In Trenton Prison -Associated Press Photo. In the New Jersey State Prison at Trenton, Bruno Richard Hauptmann again came face to face with the electric chair, where he is to be executed for the kidnaping and slaying of Charles A. Lindbergh, Jr. This airview is the most rccent picture of the somber penitentiary. 'echaniZaion In Industry' Is TopicOf Lind Manager Of Tool Builders Association Will Talk TonightToEngineers Herman H. Lind, general manager of the National Machine Tool Build- ers' Association, Cleveland, O., will speak on "Mechanization in Indus- try" at 7:30 p.m. today in the Union before a combined meeting of' five engineering college societies. The five societies under whose sponsorship he will speak are the American Society of Mechanical En- gineers, the American Institute of Chemical Engineers, the American Society of Civil Engineers, the Aero branch of the A.S.M.E., and the American Institute of Electrical En- gineers. An invitation to the student body t.: attend was extended by John Cra- iner, '36, president of the A.S.NLE. Mr. Lind is a frequent contributor to "Mechanical Engineering," the monthly publication of the A.S.M.E., and other trade journals. He cooperated with Dean Dexter S. iimball of the Cornell engineering college and Joseph McKee, director of the Greater New York Forum on Character Building, in a discussion en;ied "Youth and the Machine Ave" delivered over the National Broadcasting System on Feb. 3 of this, year. Mr. Lind will be entertained before the meeting at dinner in the Union. Name Of Huron River Derived From Huron Indian Reservation McClusky Speaks To Law Enforcers iContinued from Page 1) a sort of "big brother" influence over them. Following a crime the boys in- volved are sent to a "crime hospital" for diagnosis and cure, and are brought into court only as a last re- sult. Prof. E. Blythe Stason of the Law School opened the morning session of the Institute with a talk on "The Power of the Police to Make Traffic Regulations." He pointed out that such power has often been delegated in Michigan as well as in other states to local or state administrative of- ficials without challenge, although of doubtful legality, remarking that "there is always a difference between legal theory and practice." He suggested that such exceptions be allowed to pass or authorized where practicability demanded, such as in the creation of stop streets or establishment of speed limits. In the afternoon session of the In- stitute Floyd Loomis, former as- sistant Detroit prosecutor, spoke on "The Evidence a Prosecutor Needs from the Police," and C. W. Patter- son, chief of police for the Ann Ar- bor Railroad, discussed "Railway Po- lice Problems and Their Solution." The speeches today for the third day of the four-day session include "Evidence in Homicide Cases," which is to be given at 10 a.m. by Inspec- tor John Navarre, of the Detroit Po- lice Department, and "Obtaining Evidence in a Way to Make it Us- able," which will be given at 3 p.m. by Prof. John E. Tracy, of the Law School. Both addresses will be given in the east amphitheatre of the West Medical Building. California Retains Enforced R.O.T.C. BERKELEY, Calif., March 31. - In spite of a two-to-one student vote against compulsory military train- ing, and in spite of a petition bearing the signatures of three thousand mothers, the Board of Regents de- cided to retain the enforced R.O.T.C. on the campuses of the University of California. 10 DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 4) paitment, in a talk on the subject of "National Defense" at 7:30 p.m., Michigan Union. The talk will be followed by a colloquium on the subject of "The Threat of War and What the Student Can do about it." The student body is invited to at- tend. Coming Events Zoology Seminar: Mr. Gerald Cooper will speak on "Contributions to the life histories and ecological relationships of several important forage fishes of North America, with a brief outline of the forage fish problem," and Mr. George Wallace on "Bicknell's thrush, its taxonomy, distribution ,and life history," on Thursday, April 2, 7:30 p.m., Room 216, N. S. Acolytes will meet Thursday, April 28, 7:30 p.m., 202 South Wing. Prof. Rudolph Carnap, of Prague will lec- ture on "The Unity of Science." The meeting is open to the public. Phi Tau Alpha societas honorifica Latina Graecaque ante diem quartum Nonas Apriles (April 2) hora usitata in Hospitium Mulierum Michiganen- sium coveniet. Disputatio de auctori- bus litterarum humaniorum scripta- rum per instaurationem magnam erit. Omnes Adeste! Transportation Club will visit the Ford Plant Friday, April 3. Leaving the East Engineering Building at 1:20. Please leave your name at the Transportation Library. Weekly Reading Hour: A platform presentation of two one-act plays will be given on Thursday, April 2, at 4 p.m., in Room 205, Mason Hall, by the following students: Jane Christry, Dorothy Corson, Jean Greenwald, Helene Martin, Howard Meyers, Ruth Moore, Stuart Shiell, Personal STATIONERY One Hundred SHEETS and One Hundred ENVELOPES $ Printed with Name & Address THE CRAFT PRESS 305 Maynard St. Phone 8805 and Jeanette Strauss. All persons interested are cordially invited to these weekly readings hours. Student Senate: A meeting will be held at 7:45 p.m. Thursday, April 2, at the Union. The question for discussion is, "What Proposals Should the Student Support to Keep the Country Out of War?" Four prom- inent campus individuals will brief- ly present some of the proposals, and will be followed by an open forum. All interested are invited to attend. Roger Williams Guild: Tickets are still available for the Thirtieth An- nual banquet of the Roger Williams Guild to be held at the Michigan League on Friday, April 3, at 6:15. Dean Thomas W. Graham of Oberlin College will speak on "The Prisoner Speaks." Call 7332 for reservations by Wednesday noon. Harris Hall: Tomorrow from 12 to 1 o'clock there will be the Student Starvation Luncheon in Haris Hall. The proceeds will go to the Rector's Discretionary Fund for students. All students and their friends are cor- dially invited. I.Ae.S. Meeting: There will be a meeting of the Institute of Aero- nautical Sciences in Room 1042 of the East Engineering Bldg., 7:30 p.m., Thursday, April 4. Open forum dis- cussion on wind tunnel work and high lift appliances, conductednby Prof. Tompson. All Aero engineers are invited to participate. - Washtenaw Is Only Other Surviving Indian Name In River Valley By PROF. WILBERT B. HINSDALE (This is the third of a series of ar- ticles on the Huron River valley, writ- ten by members of the University fac- ulty for a guide book to the Huron River. Other articles will appear at a later date). The Huron River derives its name from a temporary reservation of the Wyandotte or Huron Indians, which was at one time located on the river at a point four miles west of Flat Rock, with villages reaching up stream as far as Ypsilanti. They were of Iroquois stock. In the early days the Clinton River was also called the Huron, and the portage between the headwaters of the two streams was used so extensively by the Indians as to make the two al- most a single stream. There arose in consequence so much confusion in the location of eastern claims that; Sthe name of the northern river was changed to Clinton by an act of the lcgislature in 1824. Beside the Hu- ion the only other surviving Indian irnime in the Valley is the name of this county, Washtenaw. Various Tribes Here Within the nistorical period the valley was occupied at different times by various Algonquian tribes; the Miami, Potawatomi, Ottawa, Chip- pewa, Mascoutens and Sauk; but during Pontiac's campaignaround Detroit it was held tem orarily by ! and on into the western country. The old Sauk trail, so called because fol- lowed by the Sauk from their do- mains in southwestern Michigan, northern Indiana and Illinois to Fort' Mauldin, upon the Detroit River to receive from the British government their annual stipend for services during the war of 1812, crossed the river at Ypsilanti and later became the Chicago Turnpike now known as U.S. Highway 112. Six trails con- verged at the ford where Ann Arbor now stands. Travelled By Water There was mucn ravel by water. The light Indian canoes would then traverse the main stream and many of its tributaries to points now en- tirely inaccessible by such means. When the season permitted pirogues crossed the Lower Peninsula without unloading by way of The Huron, Little Portage Lake and River, and the swamp waters of southwest Liv- ingston County into the heawaters of the Grand River and down to Lake Michigan. There is an account, of which the muthenticity is sometimes questioned, that LaSalle accompanied by four other Frenchmen and a Mohican In- dian guide went down the Huron in April, 1680 from some point west of Ann Arbor. These Frenchmen may have been the first white men to er ter the Huron Valley. Chinese Planning NOTHING ELSE HAS ITS FLAVOR Also imperial Yello 1ole $1.50 1.t' 1,p 1Lwa1m C1 za1iy u 'e y his allies from the western tribes. .xereaiion a r a. ci1.rThe Miami, Mascoutens and Sauk Pacifism Subject Mdisappeared fromthe valley justbe- The cooperative society of the For Senate Deboe or soon after the accounts of Chinese Students Club is planning to form a recreational center for Chin- written. The tribal affiliations of s The topic "What Proposals Can the people who occupied the valley ese students, T. H. Chaing, Grad., an- the Student Back to Keep the Coun- pievious to those mentioned are nounced yesterday. Chinese stu- try Out of War?" will be debated at Problems on which archeologists are dents are attempting to raise funds 7:45 p.m. tomorrow at the meeting iiew engaged. here for such a project, Chiang said, of the Student Senate to be held in The sites of ten villages, as many and they have asked for contribu- the Union Ballroom. burial places, and five ancient tions from their native China. Three faculty men and a graduate mounds have been identified at va--- student will speak at the meeting. iious places contiguous to the river Prof. John P. Dawson of the Law and are noted upon maps, but none School will talk on the desirability of them can now be detected by the of having the United States join the casual observer. League of Nations; Professor-emeri- Many Loug Trails tus William H. Hobbs for heavier ar- maments; Prof. Charles Remer foi' There were loni rails extending R iRNITY, complete neutrality; and Adrian i aydrcin rmcnrlo Jaffe, '36, for pacifism. strategic points. A trail followed theE Thffecustfompinauguratdmat river bank from Lake Erie to Dexter The custom inaugurated at the ___ first meeting of the Senate of hav- ing the speakers talk for 10 minutes I Eye Glass Frames each and briefly present the argu- I-repaired. ments for his proposals will be ad- Lenses Ground.Burr hered to in the meeting tomorrow Ls u . night. John C. McCarthy, recording HALLER'S Jewelry .. ". secretary of the Union, will preside State Street at Liberty over the assembly.I _ - _ _ _ _ _ _ - - i STUDYING OR READING under poor light will injure your eyes. Let us help you preserve your eyesight by sending you a Sight Meter. By means of the "electric eye," this instrument measures the amount of light in a room as accurately as a thermometer measures heat. Recent surveys show that not one home in ten is lighted accordi'ng to the minimum standards necessary to preserve eye- sight. Poor lighting is responsible to a large degree for the astounding prevalence of defective eyesight! Four out of ten col- lege students suffer the handicap of impaired vision. There are no substitutes for the services of an eyesight specialist, but good lighting helps to protect eyes, good and bad, young and old. It will helpyou to do better work, more easily and quickly. You can measure your lighting with a Sight Meter. That is the only way to know definitely whether or not your lighting is adequate. There is no charge of any kind for Sight Meter service. Call the Detroit Edison office. THE DETROIT EDISON COMPANY Sunday, April 12, Is Easter Sunday Your parents, relatives and friends will appre- ciate your greetings when conveyed by R CAR DS A / ~ FA STE 11 1 1,,