... Weather air Sunday and probably niday. Somewhat warmer in theast portions. £Uftr igan ~aitA6j Editorials Our Football Card Answers All Set-up' Complaints. Official Publication of The Summer Session XIII No. 42 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, AUG. 14, 19323 PRICE FIVE a a a Two Speakers On Oratorical Slate Named Dr. Raymond Ditmars of New York Zoological .Gardens to Speak Will Durant Also Booked For Talk Philosopher to Lecture on 'Democracy at the Cross- Roads' Dr. Raymond L. Ditmars, curator of the New uorkZoological gardens, and Dr. Will Durant, author of the "Story of Philosophy," and other books, will appear in Ann Arbor next year on the Oratorical association's winter series of lectures, according to an announcement made late yes- terday afternoon. Dr. Ditmars, author of many na- ture books, will take as his topic "Snakes and Reptiles," and Dr. Du- rant will discuss "Democracy at the Cross-Roads." Others Announced Previously the association an- nounced that Lowell Thomas, famous radio announcer and newspaper man, Carveth Wells, noted lecturer and ex- plorer, and William Butler Yeats, Irish poet and playwright, will ap- pear during the winter. There re- mains but one more speaker to fill out the list of speakers. Thomas will speak on the topic "From Singapore to Madalay." Fa-1 mous for his biographies of Col. Law-i rence of Arbaia, and of Count Felix. von Luckner, the German "sea devil,"4 Thomas has travelled the world over in search of odd stories and high adventure. The lecture which he will' give in Ann Arbor is an account of his most recent tour. Wells to Talk Wells is to speak on "Noah's Home Town." He is best known for his ex- plorations through some portions of the Orient and for his book, "Six Years in the Malay Jungle." At the present time, Wells is travelling through Palestine gathering material and taking motion pictures for his series of lectures during the winter season. Yeats, well known for his poems and plays, will speak on the "Growth of the Irish Theatre." Negotiationsshave been started to obtain the last speaker who will complete the program, it was stated" yesterday, and it was indicated that a man who is widely known in con- temporary governmental circles may be obtained. G. 0. P. Leaders Plan Reform On Prohibition Spanish Prince Special Cast Will Present Greek Drama Performance of 'Trojan Women' by Euripides to Be Given on Tuesday Carnegie Student To Play Lead Role T. W Stevens to Direct Production of Tragedy; Has Strong Cast Final Church Services for Session Today Dr. Fisher Will Conclude Nazi Makes Bid for Chancellorship Hitler Derm Series on Twentieth Living in the Century Prof. Carrothers Will Lead Class The Rev. Klaer to Preach At Presbyterian Church For Merle Anderson For Complete Reich Control Wins Rebuke Von Hindenburg Refuses Request of Strong Nazi Chief; Blocks Meteoric Rise to Power Offer of Cabinet Positions Rejected Vice- Chancellorship Also Refused; Von Papen Is Assurred Full Support From President BERLIN, Aug. 13._-P)-The tower- ing figure of Germany's "Grand Old Man," President von Hindenburg, again blocked today a seizure of power attempted by the meteorically rising chieftan of the National So- cialists, Adolph Hitler. To the self-confident demand of I Hitler, Austrian-born former corporal and paperhanger, for all or none of the country's governing authority, the venerable field marshal president firmly and with dignity posed his "nerve." Political observers expressed the belief that the object of the mon- archist revolt against the Spanish republic was to enthrone Prince Juan Carlos (above), Alfonso's third son, who is now a cadet in the British navy. Death Pen alty Will Be Asked For Sanjurjo Attorney General Says He Will Demand Sentence Of Military Code MADRID, Aug. 13.-(P)-AttorneyE General Martinez Aragon said today] the penalty he will ask for Gen. Jose Sanjurjo and those arrested with him in connection with last Wednes-7 day's revolt will be that demanded by the military code for officers and men who rebel against the state. Although he refused to use the death penalty, this is the punishment the code provides in such cases. The trial of Gen. Sanjurjo and those arrested with him at Huelva will be held separately, he said, and he hoped to complete it speedily, per- haps by the end of August. The general expectation was, how- ever, that if the death penalty were meted out to Gen. Sanjurjo, the Gov- ernment would commute it because of his fame as a soldier. Cannon Silent on Dry Proposal of Hoover GENVEA, Switzerland, Aug. 13. (iP-Bishop James Cannon, Jr., who is here on a visit, declined today to comment on President Hoover's speech accepting the Presidential nomination. "I have no statement to make now," he said. "After I have read Mr. Hoover's speech in full I may make a statement here or I may defer comment until my return to Washington late this month." Hoover Family Holds Its Reunion in Canada NIAGARA FALLS, Ont., Aug. 13. -(1P)-The eighth annual reunion of the Hoover family, which includes President Hoover, was held in Queen Victoria Park today with members present from Toronto, Ridgeway, Dunnville and points in the United States. The family came originally from Holland. The Canadian branch came here with the United Empire Loyalists. To Ask $800,000,000 Cut in Federal Budget WATTTTON Aiir 13-UP)-At1 "Trojan Women,'" the classic Greek Concluding a series of sermons tragedy of Euripides, will be present- on "Living in the Twentieth Cen- ed at the Lydia Mendelssohn theatre tury," Dr. Frederick B. Fisher, of the on Tuesday evening, August 16, as a First Methodist Episcopal church, special performance of the Michigan f will preach this morning on "Find- Repertory Players. The production is' ing Personal Victory." under the direction of Thomas Wood Following today's service, Doctor Stevens. Fisher and Mrs. Fisher leave for New Heading the cast, in the role of York where they will sail for Europe Hecuba, Queen of Troy, is Miss on the President Roosevelt for a two Frances Davis. The Repertory Play- months' study of the European situa- ers are frank in the statement that tino and its partciular German con- they would not have attempted the nections. play were it not for the presence of Join with Community Miss Davis on the campus this sum- At the Wesley foundation today, mer.R. Prof. George E. Carrothers, of the Miss Davis played the part of Heschool of education, will conduct his cuba inMr.Stevenst'hproductiono-regular Bible class in the morning "The Trojan Women" at the Carne- and at 6:30 o'clock the Student Guild gie Institute of Technology drama will join with the community service school. She has since directed this m Burns park. classic Greek tragedy. An excellent The Rev. Alfred Lee Klaer,asso- and finished .performance of this dif- ciated minister of the First Presby- ficult part is assured. The support- terian church, in the absence of the ing cast is exceptionally strong and Rev. Merle H. Anderson, will speak includes such well-known members on "The Elder Brother." In the eve- of the summer company as Frances ning, the student group will meet at Johnson, Lauren Gilbert, Wayne the Presbyterian church house on Smith; Dorothy Crane and Virginia I Washtenaw for a social hour andI Reilly. discussion meeting. Great art has no limits of locality Bernhart in Charge or time. "The Trojan Women" was At the First Baptist church this first performed in 415 B.C., from a morning, the Rev. L. Earl Jackson is story of the siege of Troy which even to speak on "Melting Frozen Assets." then was ancient history. At noon the students group will meet Spirit is Modern with Mrs. Dorrance and in the eve-I The pathos of it is as modern to ning there is to be a social hour andI us as it was to the Athenians. The discussion meeting at the Guild terrors of war have not changed in house on Huron street. Arthur Bern- 3,000 years. Euripides had that to hart, grad., will be in charge. say of war which we have to say of At the Bethlehem Evangelical it today. In this play the great con- church this morning, the Rev. Theo- quest "seems to be a great joy and dore R. Schmale will speak on "Rec- is in truth a great misery." ognizing Our Brothers." At 11 o'clock Euripides shows, as the centre of there will be the regular service in his drama, women battered and German. broken by inconceivable torture- the widowed Hecuba., Andromache with her child dashed to deathmCas- Ruth Chatterton Weds sandra ravished and made mad-yet Shortly After Divorce he shows that their spirits are un- conquerable. HARRISON, N. Y., Aug. 13.-( P)- The play will be presented for one Ruth Chatterton, actress, who was night only. divorced y e s t e r d a y from Ralph ing place in Munich after casting election. his ballot in the recent German Marconi Bends Short Waves In New Radio Perfects Communication System Capable of Long Distance Transmission ROME, Aug. 13.-(P/)-Guglielmo4 Marconi announced today he had fl- nally succeeded in "bending" ultra short radio waves so that he will be able to utilze his newest means of communication at longer distance than previously was possible because heretofore he was unable to trans- mit through obstacles. His latest perfection has enabled him to overcome the earth's curva- ture, which is proof, he said, that ultra short waves are not definitely limited by all obstacles. Marconi announced his discovery in a radiogram from his yacht Elec- tra in the Gulf of Aranci at the northern tip of Sardinia. He said he had used an ultra short wave ap- paratus of low power utilizing 57 centimeter waves and pqrtable re- flectors, communicating clearly both by radio telegraph and radio tele- phone from Rocca Di Papa to Capo Figari, a distance of 270 kilometers. U.of C.Crew Defeats Italy By1-5 Second Hoover Drops His Campaign F or BusinessF President Confers withr Cabinet on Coming Eco- nomic Conferences WASHINGTON, Aug. 13. -(P) - Dropping for the time being the poli- tical activities which have engrossedt him for several days, President Hoo- ver today directed his activities to- ward Governmental affairs and ther Economic Conference he is planning in an effort to stimulate business. Several Cabinet officers were call- ed in, one after another, by the Chief Executive for discussions cen- tering about these two topics.E Roy D. Chapin, the new Secretaryj of Commerce, said he had discussed plans for the General Business Con- ference with Mr. Hoover, but saidj the White House itself would have to be the only source of informa- tion concerning it. "All I can say," Chapin added, "is that the President has a very definite and a very fine plan, and I think the business men of the Country are going to like it." .Chapin said he assured Mr. Hoo- ver that he found the Commerce Department in excellent condition, with "the personnel about as effi- cient as one could imagine." In order to be more closely in touch with affairs, the President abandoned his customary week-end vacation at his Rapidan Mountain Camp. Tomorrow he is scheduled to dedicate a statue here to the late Cardinal Gibbons, of Baltimore. Refuses Special Post Hitler had been offered the post of vice-chancellor, a post which would be created especially for him and would include the office of pre- mier of Prussia, which has been va- cant since the national government imposed a virtual dictatorship in Prussia. Hitler rejected that. Chancellor Franoz von Papen next offered cabi- net posts to some of Hitler's lieuten- ants. Hitler refused that. To Hitler's claim that his party's size entitled him to exclusive power -in other words, the right to erect a Fascist dictatorship-President von Hindenburg then imposed his duty to his conscience and to the Father- land to goven Germany impartially and not in the interests of one move- ment, however large and formidable. Returns to Summer Home Having failed in a plea to Hitler to make good pre-election promises to support the presidential govern- ment, the aging von Hindenburg ended his historic audience with the fatherly words of admonition and lost no time in assuring Chancellor von Papen that he backed him to the full in the days ahead, during which most important tasks await the cab- inet. To a nation excited over reports from abroad that Hitler's storm troops would attempt to seize power by force, the president then gave an example of undaunted confidence by taking a night train to his summer home at Neudeck, East Prussia. W alker to Get $100,000 Job if He is Ousted Blumenthal Offers Mayor Legal Post; Hearing to Be Resumed Monday Following a shift in the political situation in Germany, Adolf Hit- ler, leader of the nowerful national socialist party, made his supreme bid for the chancellorship. Yesterday, he declined to accept the position of vice-chancellor. The fiery little Nazi leader is shown leaving a poll- Tolan Starts Home- With Some Assistance LOS ANGELES, Aug. 13.--()- It took an architect, a chamber of commerce secretary and rail- road official to get Eddie Tolan, newly crowned 100-meter and 200- meter Olympic champion, out of town today.. While preparing to leave for De- troit, the Negro athlete packed his railroad ticket in his trunk and did not discover it until the trunk was well on its way east. He appealed to P. R. Williams, Negro architect,twho in turn asked the advice of A. G. Arnoll, cham- ber of Commerce secretary. Arnoll took the case higher and appealed to railroad officials. They gave Tolan another ticket on his promise he would mail the other back on his arrival home. Forbes, was married shortly after noon today to George Brent, movie actor, at Harrison, N. Y. Frances Starr, actress, and Vir- ginia Hammond, were witnesses. The bride was dressed in a light silk frock and small hat. She wore no flowers. Brent, who has been appearing on the stage in St. Louis, registered to- day at the same hotel in which Miss Chatterton took an apartment on her arrival this week from abroad. She gave her age as 34; he, 28. $5,000,000 Fire Ruins Three Blocks of Manila MANILA, Aug. 13.-(/P)-Fire swept through three blocks of the old wall- ed city of Manila tonight destroy- ing the building of the Insular Bur- eau of Public Works, two colleges, the Ateneo museum and other struc- tures antedating the American reg- ime. The loss was estimated as high as $5,000,000. Republican Heads1 President's Plan Vote in December Favor for WASHINGTON, Aug. 13. - (1P)) Spurred by President Hoover's call for prohibition reform, leaders of the Senate Republican majority intended to go to work on the eighteenth amendment at the coming December session. .. Senator Monary, of Oregon, the assistant Republican leader, says the order of business when the Senate reconvenes is a vote on taking up prohibition repeal. The pending motion and proposal is one advanced by Senator Glass, Virginia Democrat, who asserted last night that Mr. Hoover's prohibition recommendation "is identical with the proposal offered by me." He facetiously denied writing this sec- tion of the President's address. Republicans, now intent on set- tling the congressional end of the prohibition controversy before the inauguration next March 4, previous- ly have contended that Glass offered their party platform proposal. President Hoover is fully expected by capitol leaders to recommend to the Congress in December immediate action on his idea for state liquor control with a Federal guarantee against the saloons and protection of dry states. Dr. Creaser's Specimens Look Like Frogs, Quack Like Ducks Scientists no longer need yearn for catfish who scorned such a diet evi- a duck billed frog, Dr. Edwin P. dently starved to death thousands of Creaser announced upon his return years ago. here today from Yucatan. The Uni- With William C. Steere, of the bot- versity of Michigan scientist and his any department of the University, three companions brought back 25 and Dr. A. S. Pease and Dr. R. G. of these queer specimens, which look Hall, of Duke university, Dr. Creaser like a frog, have a duck's bill and went, to Yucatan late in May and quack like a duck. That is more than collected about 500 frogs, reptiles and the total number of such specimens snakes; 25 gallons of fish, 500 vials possessed by scientists prior to this of insects, 800 dragon flies, 200 expedition, pinned insects, more than 1,000 crus- Blind shrimp are also included in taceans, including crayfish, shrimps the collection made by the expedition and amphipods (scuds) and other sponsored by the University of Mich- fauna and flora. igan and the Carnegie Institution at The duck-billed frogs were collect- Washington. These shrimp, which ed one rainy evening at a hacienda come from the cenotes in Yucatan, in Chichen-itza. Unseen before, it Californians Come from I Behind in Great Race I For Olympic Crown LONG BEACH, Calif., Aug. 13.-(/P): -In a nerve tingling finish that left' the crowd of 60,000 spectators gasp- ing with excitement, the UniversityI of California's unbeaten crew came; from behind with a closing surge to] whip Italy's powerful boatload to- day by just 15 inches, one fifth of a second, and win the crowning eventi of the Olympic regatta for the United States. It was a battle every sweep of the way down the 2,000-meter Olympic straightway packed with roaring' crowds. Bow to bow in the last few strokes, it was so close as both crews swept the line that it was not until the offi- cial decision came over the loud- speakers that the crowd let loose its evation for the triumphant Califor- nians. 'he official times were 6:37.6 for the United States; 6:37.8 for Italy. It was the third victory in two days and seven finals for the Americans. It followed the decisive triumphs of Garrett Gilmore and Kenneth Myers of Philadelphia in the double sculls and gave the United States the win- Ask Contributions NEW YORK, Aug. 13.--(AP)-The Mayor of New York will return on Monday to the "Hall of Governors" in Albany, there to enter on the final Why not get rid of that old furni- phase of his bitter fight for what he ture that has been cluttering your has termed his "past, present and fu- attic and getting in your way so ture." long? It can be put to good use. Joyously accorded by his friends Michigan Socialist House, the new and political allies last night a re- student co-operative residence, which ception such as is usually reserved is now open for occupation, is in need for conquering heroes, Mayor James of old beds, chairs, tables or what J. Walker rested this week-end at have you, it was announced by Sher the home of his friend, A. C. Blum- Quraishi, one of the founders. Per- enthal, in Westchester County. sons contributing the furniture or in- Blumenthal has indicated willing- terested in the project are requested ness to pay Walker a $100,000-a-year to call O. Bridge at 6675. Students legal retainer fee, should he be re- will call for any furniture that is do- moved from office. nated. Mayor Walker has spent a day and The house, which has been organ- a half so far answering questions ized by a group of graduate and un- of Gov. Franklin D. Roosevelt, once der-graduate students, has set a 'his associate in the Legislature. weekly rate of one dollar a week for The Mayor has still to explain to rent and one dollar a week for meals. Gov. Roosevelt what were his busi- An expert dietician, possessing a doc- ness relations with the missing Rus- tor's degree, has been secured to su- sell T. Sherwood, accountant of the pervise the menu. The housing com- law firm with which he was asso- mittee is headed by a doctor of phil- ciated before he became Mayor. osophy in charge of furniture and Included in the many volumes of accommodation. Holstadter Committee records, which Campus Socialists Vatican City Women the Governor has admitted as e dence in the hearing, is testimo .indicating that in five and one-h