'The Weather Increasing cloudiness and somewhat warmer today; to- morrow, probable snow flurries. ppl-fri aittu Editorials Basketball Criticism. . . mmm VOL. XLIV No.'86 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, JANUARY 21, 1934 PRICE FIVE CEN' I S lasketball Team Loses To Chicago Note Found After 37 Years Proves Glacier Is Receding R.O.T.C. Men Will Receive 11-Sophomore Team Maroons Wins First Ten Victory, 35-24 Of Big Haarlow Stars By Making 7 Baskets Wolverines Take An Early Lead, Are Held To 3 Goals In Second Half CHICAGO, Jan. 20. -(P) -Chi- cago's all-sophomore basketball com- bination won its first victory of the Big Ten season tonight, defeating' Michigan, 35 to 24, after a slow start. The Wolverines quickly took a six to nothing lead, but the Maroons led by Bill Haarlow, came back with a burst of 14 points and dominated the situation from there on. Haarlow scored seven field goals for Chicago and was the central figure in almost every play. After their first effort, the Wol- verines appeared demoralized and in the last half were held to three field goals. It was Michigan's fourth de- feat in five games, and Chicago's first Evidenceethat Greenland's moun- tains of ice are receding has been found by University explorers. Four hundred miles north of the Arctic circle, in front of the great Cornell glacier, the Michigan scien- tists found a note written in 1896 by the late Prof. R. S. Tarr of Cornell University, one of the first white men to see the glacier. Prof. Tarr died more than 20 years ago. The Cornell scientist had torn a sheet from his notebook, written a few words to indicate he was leaving it at the edge of the ice and placed the paper between two flat slabs of stone over which rocks were piled to form a monument. When the Mich- igan men chanced to find it 37 years later, Prof. Tarr's marker was about three-fifths of a mile from the front of the glacier, indicating that the ice had receded that much. Members of the expedition who made the discovery were Prof. Ralph L. Belknap, director; Evans S. Schmeling, geologist and aerologist; Max Demorest, assistant geologist- aerologist, and Herbert Gardner, bot- anist. Prof. Tarr's note was brought back to Ann Arbor, photostated for pur- poses of record, and the original sent to Mrs. Tarr whose home is in Ithaca, N. Y. While it does not prove conclusively that recession of the ice has con- tinued over a long period of time, or that it will continue, the discovery does indicate that there has been a definite retreat in the past 37 years. Prof. Belknap and his companions found other supporting evidence. They found nunataks, or islands of rock in the ice, which were not pres- ent when earlier expeditions visited Northern Greenland. These indicated tiat the ice cap had receded enough to expose a few more mountain tops. Since their return to the United States six weeks ago after a year and a half in the north, Belknap and Schmeling have been studying data collected by the expedition and put- ting their results in articles for scien- tific journals. Prof. Belknap spent most of the months of July and August, 1933, alone on the Greenland ice cap, about 180 miles in, at Camp Watkins, con- tinuing weather studies which were begun by Prof. William Herbert Hobbs of the University of Michigan in 1926. The expedition also at tempted to measure the thickness of the ice cap by the echo sounding method. The elevation at Camp Wat- kins was calculated by two methods with a difference of only three feet, (Continued on Page 6) victory in f . . . ner, f iski, c zi, g er, g . ss, g . ey, g. >ur engagements. Box Score FG FT 1 0 ... 3 2 0 1 .2 0 .... . ...1 2 0 1 .1 2 .... .... _. 8 8 FG FT ..... . . .7 1 .2 1 ............3 1 g .........2 .1 ..... .. .. .1 1 .15 5 TP 2 8 1 4 4 1 4 24 TP 15 5 7 5 3 35, low, f . f..... 'son, c Sermons By Stair, Brauer Will Be Given Services By Stellhorn And Lewis Also Scheduled; Prof. Wahr To Speak "What Makes Wrong Wrong" will be the sermon delivered at 10:45 a.m. today by the Rev. Peter Stair during the service at the First Methodist Episcopal Church. The Wesleyan Guild at 6 p. m. will hear Earnest Angles of Bolivia speak on "War in the Chaco." The Rev. C. A. Brauer will preach on "The Centurion's Faith" at the St. Paul's Lutheran Church. At 9:30 a. m. the service is in German, whereas at 10:45, it is in English. A social program will take the place of the usual'discussion at 6:30 p. m. The Zion Lutheran Church service will include the sermon of the Rev. E. C. Stellhorn, who preaches on "Jesus, Only." Prof. Fred B. Wahr of the German department will ad- dress the Student Fellowship on "The Nazi Movement in Germany." The morning service at the St. An- drews Episcopal Church will begin at 11 a. m., led by the Rev. Henry Lewis. The "Conversatione" at 7 p. m. will be led by Edwin G. Eklund of New York City. core at half - Mich- go 18. Personal fouls: ier, Tomagno, Jablon- 4, Petoskey, Haarlow, on 2, Oppenheim 2, Free throws missed: Plummer, Jab- lonski, Tessmer, Rudness, Haarlow 2, Pyle, Peterson 2, Oppenheim 2, Lang. Referee: N. E. Kearns (DePaul); J. J. Maloney (Notre Dame). Local Minister To Give Final Sermon Today February Gargoyle Rumors Remain An Unsolved Mystery Vague and enigmatic rumors of a February issue of the Gargoyle, to appear before examinations, re- mained rumors at 2 a. m. this mor- ning. Efforts to find members of the Gargoyle staff in their offices were in vain. A hurried trip about the various stations of refreshment in downtown Ann Arbor was only partially successful. A reporter was able to find out, however, that sev- eral humor-men had left the various establishments shortly before his ar- rival, Peeping through the windows of the Student Publications Building, he was° able to discern figures 'dimly moving about the Gargoyle office during the smaller hours of the mor-, ning. Just what could be determined was problematical. Heart Ailment Will Not Stop Insull Ouster Believe Greek Government Will Uphold Residence Permit Cancellation ATHENS, Greece, Jan. 20-(P)- Indications grew in informed circles today that the Greek government remains firm in its intention to de- port Samuel Insull regardless of his weak heart or a decision of the state council in the matter. This belief was buttressed by a declaration of the interior minister's secretary who said the administra- tion was determined to expell the former Chicago utilities operator de- spite his appeal to the council from a government order declining to re- new his present permit after Jan. 31. 31. The eight members of the council debated the pleas of its report and Insull's attorneys, given at a hearing yesterday, during a heated two-hour session today. Its decision was not expected before Tuesday. The only reaction at Insull's home continued to be that he was suffer- ing from a heart ailment. It was generally forecast in circles closely following the case that the council's verdict will be unfavorable to Insull because by law the govern- ment possesses the full right to reg- ulate the stay of a foreigner. 1934 Awards Best First-Year Squad And Company Will Be Hon- ored Wednesday Seniors To Receive Their Commissions Entire R.O.T.C. To Take Part In Ceremony; Best Units To Parade R.O.T.C. awards to the best drilled first-year basic squad, and company, as well as the delivering of commis- sions to the February graduating class, will be maie Jan. 24, in the Waterman Gymnasium, Lieut. Rich- ard Coursey announced yesterday. Roll call for the ceremony will be at 7 p. m. and the general public is in- vited. The entire R.O.T.C. regiment will participate in the ceremony, with the winning units giving a short demon- stration drill prior to the delivery of the awards. The University Commit- tee on Military Affairs will be pres- ent and Prof. William H. Hobbs, chairman of the committee, will de- liver a short address to the regiment. Results of competitive drills in the regiment for the first semester of 1933-34 were also announced by Lieut. Coursey. The winning company was the E Company of the 2nd Bat- talion, commanded by C. A. Marshall, '34E. The winning squad was the 3rd Squad, Company A, 1st Battalion. The corporal of this company is T. C. Hay, and the members are Charles N. Haskins, '37E, John B. Heles, '36, Wayne W. Crosby, '36, Raymond S. Rivlin, '37, Wilbur A. Chapman, '36, Charles W. Swartout, '36E, and David J. Fornetti, '37E. Best drilled freshmen, announced at the same time; are J. G. Briner, Headquarters Company 1st Bat- talion; C. N. Haskins, Company A; D. J. Dean, Company B; C. S. Lurie, Company C; R. S. Scott, Company D; R. F. Shoppel, Headquarters Com- pany 2nd Battalion; P. T. Hall, Com- pany E; J. J. Newman, Company F; R. E. Longley, Company C; J. H. Mason, Company H; R. D. Jay," Headquarters Company, 3rd Bat- talion; E. F. Snyder, Company I; C. H. Young, Company K; R. T. Cous- ins, Company L; and J. R. Wood, Jr., Company M. Real Estate To Improve NOw, Expert Claims, 1933 Marked Low Point In .Activity; New Cycle To Begin, Miller Says MIAMI, Fla., Jan. 20- (A') - Real estate, the National Association of' Real Estate Boards was told by its president, W. C. Miller, of Washing- ton, is swimming back to its place" in' the sun and the "tide of fore- closure has almost receded." In his annual address to the as- sociation, assembled in mid-winter convention here, Miller declared 1933 "undoubtedly marked the low point in real estate activity, and from that point we most certainly now are in the ascendent." Among the factors which combine for "the beginning of a new real es- tate cycle," he listed the following: "The four million families living in doubled quarters are beginning to unscramble; "Those quarters considered unfit for human habitation and housing three million people are being torn down to an appreciable degree; "The one million new families in the past three years are looking for homes. "The $500,000,000 fire loss is tak- ing its toll of residential property; "Of the 30,000,000 buildings in the United States, the average life of which is 50 years, 600,000 wear out annually, and for the past four years they have not been replaced." Clements Library Has Exhibit Of Early Maps To Consider New Budget For Fencers Board In Control To Meet Jan. 27 To Set Figures For Full Sports Program Yost Keeps Silence On Reinstatement To Lecture Here Monetar Bill Passe The Board in Control of Athletics will consider re-instating fencing as a Varsity sport at a meeting to be held Jan. 27, Fielding H. Yost, di- rector of intercollegiate athletics, an- nounced yesterday. The announcement of the special meeting came after a conference late yesterday between Mr. Yost and Prof. Henry C. Anderson, at Mr. Yost's home, where he has been confined for several days because of ill health. Mr. Yost said, "Understand, the meeting is not primarily to consider this fencing budget which the boys have submitted, but to draw up the athletic budget for the next year. However, I am to lay the suggested fencing budget before the Board at that time, although this whole thing was threshed out by them last year." Asked concerning the newly sub- mitted budget, Mr. Yost character- ized it as "very much like the first. one" which the fencers presented last fall. Mr. Yost at that time said it would not work. Now he is willing to place the whole matter before the Board. He refused to comment on the possibility of the acceptance of the new budget and the re-instate- ment of fencing as a Varsity sport. Hornbee kIs Scored For JapSpe ch TOKIO, Jan. 20. - (R) -A Foreigrn Office spokesman said today that the Japanese government regarded a "unfortunate and untimely" the speech delivered at Washington Thursday night by Stanley K. Horn- becl, chief of the division of Far Eastern affairs in the American State Department. This view was taken, the spokes- man explained, because of the speech's bearing on Japanese activ- ities in Manchukuo and the impend- ing changes in the status of Henry Pu-Yi in that Japanese-assisted state. The Japanese objected particularly to Hornbeck's reassertion of the Stimson policy of "non-recognition of governments made by swords," in- terpreting this as a renewal of offi- cial American criticism of Japan's role in the establishment of Man- chukuo. Hornbeck did not mention Man- chukuo by name, but he indicated; the Stimson formula of non-recog- nition of governments made by swords - addressed to China and Japan at the time - was still the policy of the United States.I BASKETBALL SCORES Ohio State 28; Minnesota 24. Northwestern 20; Illinois 34. Pitt 39; Notre Dame 34. New Figures 'Very Old Ones,' Director Board To Decide By Like Says ; Housl Bishop Paul Jones, radical Social- ist leader of Antioch College, Yellow Springs, O., will speak on "Your Money's Worth" at 8 p. m. Monday in the Natural Science Auditorium, in the third of the League for Indus- trial Democracy series of discussion lectures. Bishop Jones will be intro- duced by the Rev. Henry Lewis of St. Andrews Episcopal Church, while Theodore Grushko, Secretary of the Vanguard Club, will preside at the meeting. Always a progressive leader, Bish- op Jones is on the state executive 3ommittee of the Socialist Party of Ohio, and at one time, was a mem- )er of the board of directors of the 'eague for Industrial Democracy and he National Consumers Lague. He :as formerly secretary of the Fel- =owship of Reconciliation. "Your Money's Worth" is an es- pecially appropriate topic for Bishop Tones, as his connection with the Consumers' League has given him nuch experience with the consum- 3r's part in the economic order. He 'as pointed out that the New Deal 'ias recognized that there is a prob- lem of consumption and it is ex- )ected that more is to be heard about the consumer and the safeguards owed him by the government. Bishop Jones has declared that a lack of standardization has left the :onsumer unprotected against poor- ly-made articles and adulterated oods. He has shown that securing 3ne's money's worth in the actual purchasing over the counter is but a small part of this vital question, and that the interdependence of consumers and producers must be made clear to the buying public. DUCE ORDERS BLACKSHIRTS ROME, Jan. 20 -(P) -Fascist members of Italy's Senate and Chamber of Deputies (and all ex- cept a handful of senators carried over from the old regime belong to the Party) have been ordered by the Party secretariat to wear black shirts at all parliamentary sessions. BISHOP PAUL JONES Bishop Jones, Ohio Socialist, To Speak Here, 'Your Money's Worth' Be Subject Of Talk 8 P. M. Tomorrow To At Devaluation Legislation Is Pushed Through By Big Democratic Majority Senate's Approval Considered Certain American Legion Plans To Advance Program For Additional Benefits WASHINGTON, Jan. 20- (P) - Although it took until after night- fall to do it, the House Democratic leadership today whipped through President Roosevelt's dollar devalu- ation bill virtually unchanged. The vote was by the one-sided margin of 360 to 40 and Senate lead- ers confidently looked for a prepon- derant margin there, once the issue is brought to the test. The majority party leaders hope to get through next week, although the Senate is proverbially slower in legislative mat- ters than the House. Most of the day's developments centered about the monetary issue, but areverberation of the Senate committee's air mail inquiry sounded with words that the Justice Depart- ment has begun an investigation of revelations there. Study Liberalization Meanwhile, the veteran bloc on both sides studied the presidential regulation which liberalized compen- sation payments by approximately $21,000,000. The American Legion said the President's order did not go far enough and that they intended to push their legislative program, but Congressional sentiment was that they might find it hard to get ad- ditional changes in economy act regulations this session. Calls Hearings Chairman Rankin of the Veter- an's Committee has called hearings for next Tuesday on proposals to give the ex-service men additional benefits, but he postponed them un- til Jan. 30 to study the President's executive order. Although quite a few Democrats had joined in the move to liberalize existing regulations for ex-service men, it was considered doubtful that Congress would go beyond the lim- its Mr. Roosevelt set in changing the Economy Act. The Senate was in recess and a lull had come in two of the issues which claimed attention during the past few days -lobbyists and air mail, Early Release Of Kdnapped Banker Seen Bremer May Be Freed, Authorities Say; Plan To Open Negotiations Soon ST. PAUL. Minn., Jan. 20-() - Following a secret conference of au- thorities directing the hunt for kid- nappers of Edward D. Bremer for $200,000 ransom, it became known late today that negotiatidns were about to be opened with his abduc- tors for his release, possibly within 24 hours. City, county, coastal and other Federal officers participated in the conference which was preceded by a statement from Chief of Police Thomas Bahill that Bremer, whose death was threatened in the first note demanding ransom, "is o.k." and that there was "no need to start worrying until Sunday or Monday." Well authenticated sources, who declined to be quoted, indicated that actual contact with the young bank- er's abductors might be made to- night or Sunday with his release ex- pected soon after in Minneapolis or near that city. Cocktails Are 20 Cents In Ohio As Lid Is Lifted COLUMBUS, O., Jan. 20. - (') - The lid has been lifted, and Ohio has its hard liquors by the drink for the first time - legally, at least - since prohibition. Patrons of hotels, clubs and restau- Rev. H. Leave Work P. Marley Is Given Of Absence For In Kentucky Rev. H. P. Marley will make his final appearance until next fall this morning in the pulpit of the Unita- rian Church with "Loment of the Hills" as the subject of his sermon., The board of trustees of the church1 have granted him a leave of absence of six months during which time he will serve in the coal fields of south- east Kentucky for the Society of Friends and the Federal Council of Churches. A committee consisting of Prof. Ar- thur H. Wood, Prof. John F. Shep- ard, and Mrs. Walter B. Ford will be placed in charge of services during his absence. Plans for services in the future as announced by the committee include sermons by Rev. Arthur H. Winn, minister of the Unitarian Church at Flint, Jabez T. Sunderland, and Rev. Theodore Lapp, Kalamazoo. Eclipse To End On Day Before It Gets Started NORTHFIELD, Minn., Jan. 20.- ,P)-An eclipse of the sun "which ends the day before it begins" will cross the Pacific next month and American astronomers officially ap- peal to steamships to change courses and head into this temporary night in the interests of science. The appeal is issued in Popular Astronomy, Journal of American As- tronomy, with headquarters here. Owing to the depression, it states, no American expeditions are expected to observe, and passengers and officers Defendant Asks Resumption Of Wynekoop Trial CHICAGO, ,Jan. 20. -(P) - Al- though the threat of an apoplectic seizure hung over Dr. Alice L. Wyne- koop tonight, defense counsel an- nounced that the 62-year-old physi- cian had insisted her trial on charges of murdering her daughter-in-law, Rheta, be resumed Monday. "I do not think the defense will ask a postponement," said Frank J. Tyrrell. "Dr. Wynekoop is feeling bet- ter at the present time than at any previous time during the trial. The rest has done her a world of good. The doctor was insistent that we de- fense attorneys do not attempt to block the trial in any way." Tyrrell conferred with the defen- dant for half an hour at the county jail. "This thing must go on," he quoted Dr. Wynekoop as telling him. P. F. M. Fellowe s Will Relate Story Of Flight Over Everest January 'Technic' Goes On Sale Tuesday; Tells Of 'Profilograpli' The graphic account of the aerial conquest of Everest supplemented by pictorial recordings of the flight will be presented by Air Commodore P. F. M. Fellowes, chief executive officer of the expedition, at 8 p. m. Thurs- day on the Oratorical Association Lecture Series at Hill Auditorium. In an article published after the venture, Lieut-Col. L. V. S. Blacker, organizer of the Houston-Everest Expedition gives much credit to Commodore Fellowes saying that "his presence and experience became of high value to the organization, and his status in the Royal Air Force overcame many minor difficulties during the period when countless ad- ministrative details and technical Commodore Fellowes has been ac- tively connected with the flying ser- vice ever since and among other hon- ors was director of Airship Develop- ment from 1924 until 1929. He is a direct descendant of King Edward III of England. His uncle was the famous Lord Sydenham, Governor of Bombay. Many obstacles had to be over- come before the two huge Westland planes were able to soar over the highest peak in the world. Chief among these was the problem of combating the intense cold. If the film became subjected to the air en- countered at the altitude of 33,030 feet it would immediately become brittle and break at the slightest The January issue of the Michigan Technic, campus publication devoted to engineering interests, will go on sale in the Engineering Building Tuesday morning, according to Stan- ley Killian, '34E, managing editor. Described in an article by E. J. Ab- bott, research physicist of the depart- ment of engineering research, is the Dealing with a controversial sub- ject that often rises between stu- dents of the Literary and Engineering Colleges, A. Francis Klute, '35E, dis- cusses "The Importance of Culture in Engineering Education." The Engineering Spotlight this month is focused on Don W. Lyon,