ESTABLISHED 1920 l~e Ummgr lilfrhigan I43Iaity MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS VOL. X., NO. 32 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 6, 1930 PRICE FIVE CENTS NATIONALIST FOCE RETKSCHANGSHA FROM COMUNIS Reports From Areas Infested by Bandits, Communistsl Describe Violences.1 TWO WOMEN CAPTURED' Desperadoes Send Missionary's Finger to Officials Withf Demand for Ransom. (By Associated Press) NANKING, China, Aug. 5.- It. is officially announced that Nationalist troops this morn-J ing re-entered Changsha, which recently was captured by Com- munists. (By Associated Press) SHANGHAI, Aug. 5.-Stories of torture and other violence involv- ing women missionaries climaxed today's reports from the areas in- fested with Communists and ban- dits. British consular authorities at Foochow reported desperadoes had chopped a finger from the hand of a British woman missionary at Kienyang, northern Fukien prov- ince, and sent the severed digit to provincial officials at Yenping, along with a demand for $50,000 ransom for the missionary and her companion, both of whom had been held captive. Threaten Worse Mutilation I The message from the despera- does said the women's other fingers would be chopped off and sent as evidence of the seriousness of the ransom demand unless payment was forthcoming immediately. The captives are Miss Edith Net- tleton and Miss Edith Harrison of the British Church Missionary so- ciety, with headquarters in London. They were seized while traveling from Chungan toward Yenping in an attempt to escape from the dan- ger area. British Protest Mrs. A. R. J. Hearne, wife of a British official of the Tientsin-Pu- kow railway, was attacked and se- riously wounded by a Chinese sol- dier while asleep in her home at Puchen, north of Pukow, early to- day. The soldier wielded a bayonet, inflicting several wounds on Mrs. Hearne before her husband reach- ed her bedside. The attacker as- caped. Mrs. Hearne was not expect- ed to recover. British consular of- ficials at Nanking vigorously pro- tested to the Nationalist foreign office. FOOTBALL TICKET BIDS DISTRIBUTED Tillotson Announces Sending of 1930 Season Applications. More than 70,000 applications for seats for University football games this fail were mailed from the Ath- letic association yesterday. This is the largest number of applications ever sent out, according to Harry Tillotson, business manager of the Association. More than 1,000 ap- plications were sent to stadium bond holders recently. All applicants will be permitted to order four seats this year for the major games. Formerly limits were set at two and three seats per ap- plicant for the important games. Applications should not be re- turned before August 20, Tillotson said, however, all requests receiv- ed between August 20 and August 31 will be considered as of August 31 and will be filled in the first as- signment of seats which will be made during the first week in Sep- tember. Indications of capacity crowds for the major games this fall are evi- dencd by the tlarge number of room reservations for football week-ends being received daily by the Union and the Women's Lea- gue. All rooms in the Union are already taken for the Minnesota game week-end, Nov. 15, as well as for the Illinois and Chicago week- ends, Oct. 25 and Nov. 22 respect- ively. The Union has also received heavy demands for accomodations JOURNALISM STUDENT BROADCASTS ON INDIAN SITUATION OVER WJR Sher M. Quraishi, '32, of the journalism school, a native of India who is strongly interested in the present controversy n that country, was the featured speaker Monday night at the Detroit Times broad- cast over radio station WJR of De- troit. Quraishi discussed India, British rule in India, and the cam- paign of civil disobedience. Explaining his viewpoint of the conflict in India, Quraishi remarked that he was "not so much anti- British as pro-Indian." In the course of his talk he was asked: "What is the basic and fun- STUDENTS TO VISIT NEW STATE PRISON 5200 Men Prisoners Represent 51 Trades, Unskilled Number 2000. damental complaint of the people of India against British occupa- tion? Is it economic, political, or religious? "It is all three of there," he an- swered, " and above and beyond these three is the most important objection -spiritual objection. No country can find its soul or full development unless it is free. The British did not find their own de- velopment under the occupation of the Romans." The people of India, Quraishi pointed out, feel they are at great- er disadvantage in the matter of prosperity now than they were in the seventeenth century. Quraishi believes that the revo- lution in India will succeed and that the country will gain its in- dependence ultimately. Of the In- dian people he said, "At least 60 per cent are with Gandhi in his non-violent revolution." Quraishi was born in India but has become a member of the Friends church because of his paci- fistic beliefs. He is an engineer and has lived in the United States for ten years. He was employed for five years by the Ford Motor company. C. E. MYERS SPEAKS Afternoon Conference Lecturer Outlines Aims of Guidance in Planning Futures. STRESSES INDIVIDUALITY EARLY START PLANNEDj Inspection of the new Michigan State prison at Jackson will be made by Summer Session students who take the eighth summer ex- cursion Saturday morning. The par- ty will leave from in front of An- gell hall at 7:45 o'clock Saturday morning and will return to -Ann Arbor about noon. Round trip tick- ets, priced at $1.25, may now be obtained at the Summer Session of- fice in University hall. Students driving their own cars will not need tickets. Construction on the new prison REPERTORY GROUP TO COMMENCE RUN OF 'CONSTANT WIFE' Comedy Drama of W. Somerset Maugham Staged Underi the Direction of Mr. Windt. MISS TENNANT IN LEAD Allen to Play Lover and Secord as Husband: Miss Power to Play as Mrs. Culver. Play Production's Michigan Rep- ertory players will open the sixth week of their summer season at 8:30 o'clock tonight in the Lydia Mendelssohn theatre with the show- ing of W. Somerset Maugham's brilliant sophisticated comedy dra- ma, "The Constant Wife." The play will continue on the boards Thursday and Saturday nights at 8:15 o'clock and at a mat- inee performance at 3:15 o'clock Friday afternoon. It should be not- ed that tonight's curtain is sched- uled 15 minutes later than the usu- al time. Windt Directs Play Staging of the play has been un- der the direction of Valentine B. Windt, director of Play Production. During the current season, he has' also directed Barry's "Holiday," one, of the most finished productions of the Players' two summer seasons, and Ferenc Molnar's "The Guards- man., Florence Tennant is to play the leading role-that of Constance the modern wife in a family of today. Ethel Barrymore played this part in the original company which produced "The Constant Wife" at the Ohio theatre, Cleveland, in No- vember, 1926. Appearing in the same company with Miss Barry- more were C. Aubrey Smith, as her husband, and Frank Conroy, as her lover. Miss Tennant, through her many successes in campus dramatic pro- ductions has become one of Ann Arbor's favorite actresses. Allen Has Role Other members of the cast for "The Constant Wife" are Harry R. Allen, instructor in the speech de- partment, who has appeared this summer in the title role in "The' Guardsman" and as Johnnie in Sand and Prayers Used to Get Rain (By Associated Press) ALEXANDRIA, Va., Aug. 5.- Having failed to get GovernorI Pollard of Virginia to call for state-wide prayers for the relief from the drought, Dan S. Hol- lenga, business manager of the Alexandria Chamber of Com- merce, has ordered 200 pounds of rain-making powder from Arid, N. M. The powder is to be sprayed from an airplane on clouds over Alexandria in the hope that it will condense them into rain. In addition, Hollenga sent a plea to President Hoover asking him to issue a proclamation for nation-wide prayer "to ask di- vine aid for rain." BAND TO PRESENT PROGRAM TONIGHT Falcone Names Selections to Played; Classical, Popular Numbers Featured. be SENATE CAMPAIGN 'FUNDS COMMITTEE UNCOVERS FRAUDS Federal Legislation to be Asked to Curb Campaign Expenses at Next Session. BONITZ GAVE $96,750 Contribution Not in Return for Promises of Contracts", Says Bonitz. (By Associated Press) WASHINGTON, Aug. 5. - Testi- mony regarding an individual con- tribution of $96,750 to the Davis- Brown cause and charges of fraud and irregularities in Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, Harrisburg and West- chester in the Republican primar- ies last May were laid before the Senate Campaign Funds committee today by more than a dozen wit- nesses. The hearing, the last to deal with the Pennsylvania contest, also de- veloped detailed testimony regard- ing the recount - of ballots in the contest between former governor Pinchot and Francis Shunk Brown for the gubernatorial nomination and its affect on the results which showed Pinchot and Secretary of Labor Davis the respective winners of the gubernatorial and senatorial contests. DESIRES LARGER GROUP University students will have the opportunity to break the long grind of study and temporarily to forget the hot weather when the Univer- sity of Michigan's summer band resentS its second concert on the I was started in 1924, the major part of the work being completed in It should be kept in mind that 1929, at a cost of approximately no member of the high school staff $7,000,000. More than 5,200 prison- is expected to make plans for the' ers are housed at the present time students but to aid them in mak- in the 13 cell blocks. ing their own plans. The pupils Within the high walls, in addi- individuality must be respected. tion to the cell blocks, are two Those who object to vocational serve-self dining rooms, the kitch- guidance as a school service to ens, the auditorium, a 200-bed hos- youth usually think of it as a pro- pital, laundry, three industrial vision for directing or assigning buildings, including the textile the student to some occupation. It plant. is rather provision for aiding him On the inspection tour, the party to find his own way into a suitable will see, among other things, the! occupation with the least waste of dining room and kitchens, the cell time and effort," said Prof. George blocks, the textile plant, the school E. Myers in the Education Confer- facilities, and other prison depart- ence lecture yesterday afternoon. ments. Professor Myers then called at- Only men prisoners who are serv- tention to the student's need for ing sentences of from six months information upon which to base his to life are quartered in the new planning, if he is to plan wisely, prison. Among the more common ij ust as the architect in planning a offenses that result in imprison-I building must have information as ment are breaking and entering, to the purposes of the building, the forgery, violation of the liquor law, resources available for its construc- robbery armed, larceny, murder, tion, the qualities of possible con- and manslaughter. struction materials, the environ- Trades and occupations of the ment in which it is to be placed, prisoners number 51. Two thousand and so forth. are unskilled laborers, the remain- "The student needs information der being skilled in some trade or concerning his own assets and pla- profession. More than 500 have bilities-physical, mental and per- seen service in the army or navy. sonal, the raw material with which Approximately 100 have gone to he has to work," he continued. "He college.xneeds to learn what can be done with this material. He needs to Foreign-born prisoners contrib- know the requirements and oppor- ute more than 16 percent of the tunities of a number of occupa- total population, while more than tions." f one-fifth are negroes.b Witnesses Disagree library steps tonight from 7:15 to Witnesses were divided on the 8 o'clock. advisability of Congress enacting The program will consist of the legislation to assist states in the following numbers: conduct of primaries and elections. Star Spangled Banner.......Key But Chairman Nye emphasized be- Wolverine March........Gehring fore the hearing opened that rec- eofSeville.....ommedations for some federal leg- Overture to BarberRossini islation to curb campaign expendi- Selections from Maritana..Wallace tures undoubtedly would be asked Cornet solo: The Charmer...... in the committee's first report at .L. F. Boos the next session. William Boos Walter A. Bonitz, Pittsburgh brick manufacturer, told the committee Adagio from "Farewell Symphony" he contributed voluntarily $96,750 S'Haydn to the Davis-Brown campaign. M. Men March............Falcone Questioned by Nye, he denied any Neopolitan Nights......Zamecnik-of the money was given in return Grand March from Aida.....Verdi for promises of state or county Yellow and the Blue.......Balfe brick contracts. Lack of lights will limit the numT Bonitz Denies Promises ber of encores which the band will "That's absolutely foolish and be able to play, Nicholas D. Fal- tommy rot," Bonitz said. "I've got cone, director of the band, an-dy my own reasons for being in poli- nounced yesterday. tics." "Holiday." He will be seen this week as Bernard Kersal, Con-' stance's lover. Arthur Secord, whol a~vnarr7 x~ith TMic TpnanntlAsCt 'Michigan's summer band which was organized for the first time this summer has already grown to appearedwiLi m 1eis ennJ.L1 iJ1t5' --- ---- summer in "Craig's Wife" and in more than 45 members. Students "Escape," will have the part of who compose the band are those Constance's husband. who are interested in music and Mary Power, the delightful "Ma- have learned to play some band in- ma" in "The Guardsman" will be strument. Mr. Falcone states that seen as Mrs. Culver. Pauline Bauer- he desires to increase the members smith has the role of Martha. She of the band to approximately 75 has also appeared as the actress in members and requests that any "The Guardsman" and Mrs. Sheri- student interested see him without dan in "Close Harmony." Complet- delay. ing the cast are Helen Workman as The added expense makes it im- Marie-Louise; Marie O'Hare as possible for the music school to Barbara; Dean Currie as Mortimer provide the summer band members Durham; and Vinal Taylor as Bent- with special uniforms or to publish ley. separate program. y I I ' 3 3 t S 1 More than 500 prisoners have completed high school courses. soners between the ages of 21 30 constitutenearly half of total prison population. Pri- and the BESEKIRSKY, MAIER PRESENT EXCELLENT PROGRAM AT HILL AUDITORIUM IN FIFTH FACULTY CONCERT BASEBALL SCORES American League Detroit 5, Cleveland 4 Washington 6-1, New York 4-7 Boston 4, Philadelphia 3 Only games scheduled National League. Brooklyn 9, New York 8 Boston 6, Philadelphia 2 Chicago 5, St. Louis 4 Only games scheduled. (By Associated Press) Is here shown pursuing the line A Review by Wililam J. Gorman In the first half of last night's recital there was as much musician- ship and quite as much good mu- sic as one gets at an ordinary Chor- al Union Concert. A series of fac- ulty concerts of this splendid cal- ibre would considerably richen the regular school year. Guy Mailer opened (delightfully with a Mozart Sonata. One sus- pects, now, that of the duo that gave us such splendid Mozart dur- ing the May Festival, Mr. Maier supplied both the direction and the} correct temperament (what Mr. Frantz called "spontaneity"). Thre is in his solo Mozart good taste d refinement (perfectly polished mel- odic lines). But he also feels the rythm of Mozart. There is the gay- ety in his playing (the gayety of temperament if you will): the per- fec)1y organized (yet none the less gay) gayety of a perfectly executed dance pattern. Indeed, Ezra Pound has suggested that a considerable portion of what we call the charm directed motion which his musicI imparts. (The dance origins of the l sonata form might suggest this).I At any rate, Mr. Maier is deli- cate (in the melodies) and gay (in' the rythms): which means very' good Mozart and almost the very best of music. His "Perpetual Mo- tion" was energetic but quite too hurried; it sounded nervous rath- er than vivacious. Mr. Besekersky chose to make his Ann Arbor debut as head of the violin department in the eigh- teenth century. It was a bold thing to do; as Ann Arbor taste is probably still in the nineteenth. Yet that it was the sensible thing to do, the perfection and interest of his first group testified. The music of Bach or one of his lesser contemporaries like Veva- cini is a perfect place to exhibit one's virtuosity. Because it is pure music. That is, all its strength lies in the notes and reveals itself in the vitalized, articulate playing of er. There need be no personal ex- pression. All that is needed is He said his company had been making fire brick for six years and a total sales in that period to Alle- gheny county and the s t a t e amounted to "only $375,000." Neither Davis nor Brown solicit- ed any money from him, he said, adding he had been asked to con- tribute since the primaries to make a deficit but refused, saying: "My God, don't you think I've been tak- en for enough?" PRESIDENT NAMES NEW ARMY HEADS Appointments Fill Highest Posts on Army Staff and Marines. (By Assoi ated Press) WASHINGTON, Aug. 5.-Presi- dent Hoover today appointed Ma- jor-General Douglas MacArthur chief of staff of the Army and Brigadier General Ben H. Fuller, commandant of the Marine corps. In raising the two to the highest peace-time posts in their respec- tive fields, the President lifted them above the heads of several officers who topped them in rank. Both have seen long service in the field in various parts of the world. General MacArthur was the sen- ior officer in the army, however, with sufficient time left before his retirement to complete the full four-year term as chief of staff. Seven other officers topped him in rank, but all will reach the retire- ment age of 64 within the next four years. The promotion of General Mac- Arthur to the full rank of general will become effective Nov. 20 upon the retirement of General Charles E. T. Summerall. General Fuller will assume permanent command of the Marine corps immediately succeeding the late Major-General Wendell C. Neville. He has been acting, commander since General technical strength. The music I played takes care of the expression. What better place for the applica- tion of virtuosity? In this context the term has no bad connotations; but is rather the ideal for the per- former. Mr. Besekirsky's technique was quite as mature as everyone ex- pected. Sensitive tonal quality, ex- traordinary power, and the deft and precise production of intensi- ties were outstanding characteris- tics. The second half of the program was not quite as atractive. Mr. Maier played two of the dullest' Chopin numbers and closed with three well-received compositions for which perhaps only the heat was justification: music of the "bet- ter-restaurant" class one might call it. Mr. Besekirsky played a some- what too extended list of senti- what mtvr? venitAvelv for his last