TUESDAY, JULY 14, 1931
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THE SUMMER MJOHIGAN DAILY PAftU q'~D~u
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NIAGARA VISITORS
INSPECT TERRAIN
IN BENNETT'S SHIP
Professor Hobbs Conducts Tour
of 25 Students; Explains
Geology in Plane.
VISIONS NEW ERA
FANLL WILL SERVE
SENTENCE IN WEST
g OING WR
SPORIS WORL ;:E
Former Secretary of
Chooses New M
Penitentiary.
Int
exico
erior
TWO FLIGHTS NECESSARY
University Group Studies Gorge,
Lewiston Escarpment, Night
Lighting of Falls.
Flying in the great tri-niotored
Ford plane that the aviator, Floyd
Bennett, used in his rescue flight
to Newfoundland to save the
Bremen flyers, 18 of the 25 mem-
bers of the excursion to Niagara
Falls crossed an area of about 25
miles last Saturday.
The capacity of the plane being
from six to 14 passengers, the ex-
cursionists went on the flight in
two groups. Profesor Hobbs ac-
companied both groups in the plane
to explain the unusual characteris-
tics of the falls, the gorge, and the
Lewiston escarpment, which were
very clearly visible because of the
excellent weather conditions.
Guests of Air Line.
Unusual courtesy and considera-
tion were shown the members of
the excursion by the flying com-
pany which took the students, as
its guests, from Chippawa to the
airport, and, after the flight, back
to the city of Niagara Falls, in its
cars without charge to individuals.
So much enthusiasm about the
flight was in evidence that it will
be made a feature of the future ex-
cursions to Niagara Falls conducted
by the geology department.
Other features of the trip about
which members were very enthusi-
astic, were the luncheon at Niagara
Glen, and the Scenic Tunnel on the
Canadian side, from which one
looks out from beneath the falls.
Schedule Maintained.
In the evening the illumination
of the falls was viewed from the
specially protected roof of the La-
fayette hotel on the Canadian side.
This roof, in protecting the party
Dr. William J. Mayo,'
Famed surgeon of Rochester,
Minn., who told the American Med-
ical Association, during a recent
convention in San Francisco, that
the world is on the verge of a new
era in medical research which will
prolong human life in every part
of the world.
Sports Xoman
Open hockey is .being sponsored
by the Women's Department of
Physical Education. All women on
campus interested in playing are
invited to be dressed for play at
7:15 o'clock next Wednesday eve-
ning.
Special short courses running for
just two weeks are being given in
boh tennis and tap dancing. Class-
es meeting at 7:15 on Monday and
Wednesday evenings are beginning
this week. There is no fee and reg-,
istration takes place daily from 9
o'clock until 5 o'clock in Barbour
gymnasium.
from the rain which fell Saturday
evening, enabled them to carry out;
every detail of the schedule that
had been planned.
The next excursion conducted by
the geology department will be to;
Put-in-Bay, Lake Erie, via Steamer;
"Put-in-Bay," on August 2.
ADD DAY TO SENTENCE
EL PASO, Tex., July 13.-(A')-
Albert B. Fall was resigned today
to the prospect of serving a prison
term on conviction of accepting a
bribe while he was secretary of the
interior.
Ending a long fight based on the
assertion Fall's health would break
in confinement, a member of his
family announced Sunday that the
former cabinet officers had agreed
to the addition of a day to his one-
year sentence in order that the time
might be served outside the Dis-
trict of Columbia.
He expressed a desire to enter
the penitentiary of New Mexico,
his home state. That plea was con-
tained in a message from Dr. J. H.
Gambrell, his private physician, to
Frank Hogan, Fall's Washington
counsel.
Dr. Gambrell said the climate of
Washington would affect adversely
the health of the former secretary,
who was convicted of accepting
$100,000 from E. L. Doheny for
leasing of the Elk Hills naval oil
reserve.
Fall came to the El Paso home
of his wife several weeks ago from
his Three Rivers, N. M., ranch for
physical examinations following re-
fusal of the supreme court to re-
view his conviction.
His physicians said service of the
sentence in an eastern prison would
result in his early death. An order
that he serve the term was based
on a subsequent report of govern-
ment physicians.
Members of Fall's family said his
side of the case had never been
told, and that when the public
learned the facts it would recognize
him as "the most unjustly treated
man in history."
COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY--Olaf
Leonard Larsen, blind student,
graduated recently, and received
Phi Beta Kappa.
By C. H. Beukema.
The American League race, if it
may be called a race, has just seen
the three leaders, the Athletics,
Senators and Yankees cutting each
others' throats in more of these so-
called "crucial" series., and the net
results is that the Macks are still
six games ahead. All three teams
contributed generously in the mat-
ter of shoving Boston back into
seventh place. In the scramble for
points in the percentage table
among themselves, however, Phila-
delphia trimmed Washington a suf-
ficient number of times to maintain
a safe lead, the Senators -lost ground
by falling before the Macks and
breaking even with the Yankees
and the Yankees crept closer by
finishing one up on the Macks and
dividing with Washington.
The three leaders will undoubted-
ly fatten their averages during the
next couple of weeks when the four
western clubs enter the seaboard
strongholds.
The westerners were not able to
hold their own in their home lairs
during the recent invasion by the
eastern teams and were easy prey
to the Macks, Senators, Yanks and
even the Red Sox when they last
appeared in the east. It is a safe
bet that they will finish the eastern
swing buried still farther in the red
than they are at present.
* * *
Considerable has been said re-
garding the ability of Lefty Grove
and George Earnshaw to keep the
Athletics at the top of the junior
league standings. But since Wal-
berg has been going great guns in
the turret there has been little for
Mack to worry about, and, with his
second string flingers turning in
some creditable work he can easily
afford to smile. The reserve men
include Leroy Mahaffey, Waite Hoyt
and two youngsters, Peterson and
McDonald.
Mahaffey has turned in his share
of wins, and Hoyt, erstwhile Tiger,
has pitched two games and in each
case has allowed the enemy only
two runs. Peterson and McDonald
collaborated in turning in a weird
game a few days ago. They allowed
the Yankees only two hits in reg-
ulation time, but, as the hits were
both four-ply wallops and one was
hit with a man on base, they lost
3 to 1. Charlie Ruffing, working the
game for the Yankees, gave up but
four hits that day.
STATE INSTITUTlI
Would-be Criminologists Visit
Jackson Prison to Study
Administration.
Prof, Arthur E. Wood, of the
sociology department, conducted a
trip to the Michigan Sate Prison
at Jackson over the week-end on
which members of the class in
Criminology obtained first-hand
information on many of the prob-
lems in prison psychology and
prison administration.
Facts which the assistant chap-
lain told members of the group in-
dicated that there are more than
4,000 inmates in the new prison,
and more than 1,000 in the old di-
vision.
The textile mill in which pri-
soners work was one of the interest-
ing phases of the inspection, al-
though it gives occupational activ-
ity to comparatively few of the
prisoners.
Additional features and tech-
niques employed in Jackson prison
were explained to the group in the
new chapel which has just been
completed by the prisoners them-
selves. The new talking picture
machine installed through contri-
butions from the prisoners, enabled
a large majority to hear talking
pictures for the first time in their
lives.
Post, Gatty Prepare
for Tour of Country
NEW YORK, July 13.--(IP)-Wiley
Post and Harold Gatty return to
New York this week to prepare
for a tour of the country, to last
from six to eight weeks.
Present plans, in filling as many
requests as possible, call for a
"figure eight" flight over the con-
tinent. The aviators will swing
across New England, into the cen-
tral and middle-west, across the
southwest, up the Pacific coast,
through the northwest, over an-
other middle-western route into
the south and up the Atlantic
coast to end in the east.
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