T"HE MICHIGAN DAILY iDa nland Trip 'iscussed By A. Belknap U.S. Agents Spurs Search For Bremer Kidnapers :tic Expedition Studied torm Conditions, Radio 'peaker Declares we study of storm conditions in Arctic region was one of the most rtant purposes of the University Oichigan, Pan-American Airways :nland Expedition, Prof. Ralph L. nap, who recently returned from expedition, stated in his ad- s on the parent program overt University Radio hour last night. he expedition, which was organ- in the Spring of 1932, was sup- ed in part by the University, but e funds did not come from taxes, from private donations, Professor nap pointed out. )ata gathered on the expedition be correlated with that obtained ol. Charles Lindbergh in his sur- last summer," the speaker said. for Greenland itself, Prof. Bel- > pointed out that the island was e times as large as the state of as, that 95 per cent of the island covered by a glacier, that the ice snow was in some places over 3 feet thick, and that the 15,000 bitants lived with little inter- ce, from Danish officials. 'ofessor Belknap discussed the Ortance of appropriate dress in Arctic, the diet of seal meat, :h the members of the expedi- f learned to enjoy, the treachery; he ice packs, and the dependa- y of the dog teams. n the same program, Prof, ben L. Kahn, director of the Oratories at the University Hos- 1, discussed the research investi- ons in progress in the Clinical, oratories at the University. .ur Arrested n nhin Of YoungNegro x Scott Is Taken From Pounty Jail By Mob; Au- horities To Investigate: AZARD, Ky., Jan. 25.--(P)-Four1 n were arrested today in the hing of Rex Scott. :AZARD, Ky., Jan. 25.-A)-- An nsive investigation of the lynch- of Rex Scott, 20-year-old Negro, launched by Perry county au- rities today. Scott was forcibly oved from the county jail here Onesday night by a mob of armed o and hanged to a beech tree in aveyard in Knott county, ad- ailer Troy P. Combs, when in- ned the Negro had been lynched hour after his removal from the telegraphed the details to Gov. y Laffoon at Frankfort. Ken- ky law requires that the governor love any jailer surrendering a oner to a mob and grant him a ring to determine if he shall be stated. .firty or forty masked leaders of lob of approximately 300 men who rmed around the jail forced their y inside and threatened Jailer nbs with death if he did not sur- der the key to Scott's cell. )eputy Jailer W. C. Knuckles scornered in a jail corridor and keys were found on him. Scott's was unlocked and he was dragged of the jail and hustled into an omobile, which led a motorcade ich bore other members of the b -out of the city. 5ott was charged with slugging x Johnson, a miner, on a side et here Saturday night. As the chines passed the scene of the gging, approximately 100 shots e fired into the air. Johnson died the hospital here two hours after Negro was found and lynched. He d never regained consciousness. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 2) W. Sellars, of the- Department of Philosophy, will speak on the subject, "Present Trends in Philosophy" on Thursday, February 15, at 4:15 p. M., in Natural Science Auditorium. This is the fifth of a series of Uni- versity lectures by members of the University of Michigan faculties. The public is cordially invited. Lily Pons Program: Lily Pons who will appear in the Choral Union Series, Hill Auditorium, Monday night, January 29, has revised her program to read as follows. She will be assisted at the piano by Giuseppe Bamboschek and also by a flutist who will play a group of numbers. I Se tu m'ami ............Pergolesi Pur dicesti 0 bocca. bella................Antonio Lotti Air from "Zemire et Azor .. .Gretry Lo Hear the Gentle Lark........ ..Sir Henry Bishop Aria "Caro nome" from ''Rigoletto"....'........Verdi Air, "Tu vois la-bas" from "The Czar's Bride"..... ...... .... . Rimsky-Korsakoff The Rose and the Nightingale . ...Rimsky-Korsakoff Aria, "Una voce poco fa" from "The Barber of Seville" ... Rossini Theme varie . ... . Saint-Saens Les Filles de Cadix........Delibes Pastorale. ..Frank La Forge Aria, "Ardon gl' incensi" from "Lucia di Lammermoor" . Donizetti A limited number of tickets are still available at the ofIce of the School of Music, Maynard Street and on the evening of the concert the box office at Hill Auditorium will be open at 7 o'clock. Events Toda Theosophy: There will be a talk on. "Reincarnation and Karma," by Miss J. M. Jiminez, at the Ann Arbor The- osophical Society, at 8:00. p. m., in. Michigan League.. PARIS, Jan. 25.-(P)-Four pistol shots were exchanged without ef- fect today in a duel between Deputy Andre Hesse and John Beindeix, Paris lawyer, who met to settle dif- ferences growing out of charges aired in connection with the monumental Bayonne bank scandal. Hesse, lawyer for the large Sergei Stavisky, founder of the failed Bay- onne pawnshop, regarded as an in- sult a newspaper article written by Beineix. They left the dueling ground un- reconciled. The men fought in a secluded spot on the outskirts of Paris known as the Pac des Princes, which formed a part of the old fortifications of the city. The spot has been the scene of many duels in the past. The morning was freezing and cloudy, making it necessary for them to wait until there was sufficient light.; Dueling is against the law in France and the time and location of the encounter had been kept secret to forestall official interference. The adversaries left their homes early in the morning and went with seconds to the homes of friends, later driving to the "field of honor," which is only a stone's throw from the famous Bois de Boulogne and the historic race course Auteuil and Longehamps. After brief preliminary talks with their seconds, the men took their positions and on a given signal each fired two shots-but without results. Although honor had been satisfied, according to the ancient dueling tradition, the men refused to be rec- onciled and left the dueling ground without shaking hands. Their quarrel was to give added bitterness as both were political rivals of the same district of Charente- Inferieure. London's Worst Fo g., In Years Takes 4 Lives Frenchmen Stage Pistol Duel But They Are Both Bud Shots -Associated Press Photo Federal operatives scoured underworld haunts in Minneapolis, St. Paul and Chicago for clues in the kidnapping of Edward G. Bremer (lower right), wealthy St. Paul banker, held for $200,000 ransom. Walter' Magee (upper left), friend of Bremer, was ready to act as intermediary in behalf of Adolph Bremer (upper right, wealthy brewer and father of the victim. James Quinehan (center), milk truck driver, believes he was a witness to the kidnaping, which occurred when a sedan halted the Bremer car (lower left) at an in- tersection. Bremer's machine later was recovered. Russell Elected To N. Y. Alumni Board Edwin F. Russell, '32, who. was a graduate student last year, has been. elected to the board of governors of- the University of Michigan Club in New York City, according to an an-, nouncement received yesterday by T. Hawley Tapping, general secretary of the Alumni Association. Russell was prominent in campus activities while an undergraduate, and, as a senior, he was captain of the Varsity track team. BOY KILLED IN ACCIDENT JACKSON, Jan. 25:-(A)-John Rumbler, 11, was: fatally injured: Wednesday night when an automo- bile police said was driven by Mrs. A. Tracy struck him. 2 Football Men At Maryland "On Pro' ForRock Throwing (By Intercollegiate Press) COLLEGE PARK, Md.-Jan. 25- Suspension penalties against Willis Benner and Dick Nelson, of the Uni- versity of Maryland varsity football team, have been lifted following the apologies of the students for partici- pating in throwing rocks through windows of the gymnasium. Together with Thomas Webb,. Harry Gretz and Lewis Jannarone, the two athletes are now on proba- tion for an indefinite period. President Raymond A. Pearson said he knew that all five men were of high character and simply committed a foolish prank on the spur of the Magazine Carries Article On Alumnus The feature article of the golden jubilee issue of the Annals of Surgery, which has just been published, is a biographical sketch of Dr. Lewis Stephen Pilcher, '62, of Brooklyn, one of the oldest living alumni of the University. The story is entitled a "Biographical. Picture of A Master of Periodical Literature." He has made numerous gifts to the University at various times, accord- ing to T. Hawley Tapping, general secretary of the Alumni Association. moment. Nelson, quarterback on the football team .and third baseman on the university nine, and Benner, also of both teams, may be able to repre- sent the university in baseball this spring. French Parliament Is Threatened By Premier PARIS, Jan. 25.-(A')-Premier Ca- mille Chautemnps today threatened to resign and take his cabinet with him if the chamber of deputies created a parliamentary committee to investi- ga'te the Bayonne pawnshop scandal. The scandal itself, resulting from the operations of Serge Stavisky, who muleted the French public of $40,000- 000, then committed suicide to. avoid arrest, was the signal for numerous mob demonstrations which have oc- curred in Paris throughout the last week. . Chautemps insisted that the gov- ernment would clwean up the condi- tions which made the r Stavisky scandal possible but agreed only to accept a non-political civic com- mittee composed of judges and par- liamentarians to aid the work. WRITES ON LIBRARY The current issue of the American Scholar, fraternity publication of Phi beta Kappa, carries an article on "Valuable Source Material In Ha- waiian History To Be Found in the University of Michigan Library" written byLieut.-Col. Thomas M. Spaulding, '02. meeting Sunday 5:30 p. m. at Zion Lutheran Parish Hall, E. Washington St. at S. Fifth Ave. Professor L. A. Hopkins, Director of the Summer Session, will speak on a topic of his own choosing. LONDON, Jan. 25.-(P)--Snarled and crippled traffic under a black fog, the worst in years, found thou- sands of Londonaires marooned in bus and rail stations early today after a night of mishaps which caused four deaths. Scores were in- jured. Many train schedules were can- celled entirely. Thousands of pass- engers were held at various stations. Omnibus and train service was largely suspended. One tram got lost. Labeled Streatham Common, it pulled into Streatham Hill, a mile off the route. Taxis refused fares and hugged the curbs. Private cars were stalled all over London. Collisions were nu- merous. In one traffic snarl nine automobiles and in another seven of them became inextricably tangled. The great fog blanket extended from Doncaster in the north to Sus- sex and East Engia, and was accom- panied by temperatures just below freezing. Southwestern England was clear and bright. Coming Eents Sigma Xi: The next imeeting will be held in the Chemistry and Phar- macy Building at 7:30 p. n. on Tues- day, February 27. The Society will be the guests of the Department of Chemistry and the College of Phar- macy. Scenes From "Hamlet": The class in Oral Interpretation of Dramatic Literature will give a review of scenes from "Hamlet" at 7 o'clock Thursday evening, February 1, in. Room 302 Mason Hall. Persons interested are invited to attend this review. Lutheran Student Club: Regular' AIRLINE RESERVATIONS Flight Instrudction. Local Passenger Flights Special Charter Trips- ANN ARBOR AiR SERVICE MunicipalAipr 4320 Suth Stat Day Phone 9270 Night Phone 7739 MII FOR FINAL EXAMS 11111 Stock up with- OUTLINES FOR REVIEW Complete Stock FOUNTAIN PENS-$1.00 and Up. BLUEBOOKS-all sizes and rulings. The Michigan Union at WA:HRit'S UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE i STATE STREET Wishes to Ann ounce The Foll1owing Dance Features... . R F jill J -Hop SPEdAL!f 150 Pairs of Men's $6.50 to $7.50, STREET or FORMAL i i I unique arrangement of "Smoke *Gets In Your Eyes" will be sung by Mary Ann Mathewson, accompanied by the Union band, in the Union Ball- room tonight and tomorrow night. 1/1 9 Union dances will continue thru FINAL EXAMS! A A@ each week-end of the examina- tion period. The music will be furnished by the Michigan Union band. BLUE BOOKS $ (All Sizes) Reduced to 95 for1ODays I E M The Union will sponsor a dance 9 on the night of February 9th, for those who have been unable to secure tickets for the J-Hop. SWIFT'S I OTHER STYLES A Tea Dance will be given Satur- 4* day afternoon, February 10th, III