The Weather Generally fair today preceded by unsettled in southeast. Cold- er in south portions. Art VOL. XLIV No. 122 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, MARCH 18, 1934 PRICE FIVE CENTS Action Of Regents Will Keep Library Open On Sundays Board Decides Main And Periodical Units Should Be Made Available Money Raised By Coneil Is Refused Known Donations May Be Returned To Sororities, Fraternities And Houses SThe main and periodical reading rooms of the library, but not the study halls or the stacks, will be open from'2 to 9 p.m. on Sundays for the remainder of the year, the exec- utive committee of the Board of Re- gents decided yesterday morning. The decision came as the result of a petition sent by the Undergraduate Council to the Board, and was grant- ed, the Board said, "on the grounds stated in the second paragraph of the earnest desire on the part of the student body to have the use, of the library on Sundays." Al 1th o u gh the Undergraduate Council had raised approximately $160 from the student body for the purpose of keeping the library open, none of this money will be used, the R Board explained. "The Executive committee appreciates the desire of the students to provide assistance by voluntary contributions but it feels that it cannot, in justice to the stu- dent body, accept the funds that have been rasied," President Alex-" ander G. Ruthven said in a com- munication to the Council announc- ing the Board's action. Gilbert E. Bursley, president of the Undergraduate Council which con- ducted the library fund drive, last night said that the money probably would b4 deposited in the office of Walter Rea, assistant to the dean, w eret ;wil be. kept for & few days until the Council finally decides what to do with it. "We know where most of the mon- ey came from and probably will re- turn it to the students, fraternities, sororities, and dormitories which con- tributed it," Bursley said. "This will leave about $15 unaccounted for, which probably will be turned over to the Good Will Fund." Bursley explained that the Under- graduate Council had initiated the drive at the request of many stu- dents who asked that the library be open Sundays, and that the drive had no official connection with the Uni- versity authorities. The library of- ficials were told, however, that the Council might conduct the drive and told the Council to go ahead, Bur- sley said. Miss Perkins Outstanding In Reform Work Secretary Of Labor Has Long Been A Leader In Aiding Labor Conditions Said to be one of the keenest think- ers in 1*e world by the President, Miss Frances Perkins, who is speak- ing at 8 p.m. Friday, March 23, in Hill Auditorium, attained her great success not so much by her political endeavors but rather by her efforts to instigate sociological reform in American industry. Miss Perkins is a graduate of the class of 1902 at Mt. Holyoke College. From there she went to Lake Forest, Ill. to teach. The writing of Jacob Riis ("How the Other Half Lives") and Lincoln Steffens ("The Shame of the Cities") fired her ardor for re- form. She went to Hull House and studied under Jane Addams for six months, after that taking post grad- uate work at Columbia University. In 1911, while visiting friends in Manhattan, she saw 146 factory girls burned to a crisp in the great Tri- angle Shirtwaist fire. That fire start- ed. a reform movement for industry which Miss Perkins still leads. As a member of a committee on safety she went to Albany and lobbied through legislation for factory fire preven- tion. There she met three young leg- islators: Al Smith, Bob Wagner, and Frklin n. Rnnsvlt-. whn have Arm y's Planes To Carry Mail Again Monday Announcement Is M a d e Despite Rickenbacker's Attack On System WASHINGTON, March 17 - () - The Army will resume transporting the air mail over nine routes at 12:01 a.m, Monday. This was announced today at the War Department after Eddie Rick- enba'cker, war ace, had demanded before a Senate committee that Pres- ident Roosevelt "purge his official family of those traitorous elements who misadvised him" on the air mail situation. Army transportation of the mail has been suspended for a week in response to President Roosevelt's in- structions that the entire air mail set-up be radically overhauled and reorganized to provide greater safe- ty. Ten Army pilots had been killed since the Government started carry- ing the mail. Only four of them, however, were actually engaged in mail transportation. Maj. Gen. Benjamin D. Foulois, chief of Air Corps, radioed to the War Department his recommenda- 'tion that air mail flying be resumed. ie received the Department's imme- diste , ov to use his own judg- fnetf ring resumption of fly- Dtroit Priest inion Is To Conduct Services .ere Rev. Leo J, DeBarry, D.D., of the faculty of Sacret Heart seminary, De- troit, will conduct the services of the annual Retreat and Forty hours de- votion at St. Mary's Chapel for Cath- olic students attending the Univer- sity of Michigan, opening this morn- ing and concluding Tuesday evening. The annual observance will begin with the 10:30 a.m. mass today at the Chapel, and the closing will occur at the service at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday with solemn procession of the Blessed Sacrament. There will be two masses daily at 7 a.m. and 7:45 a.m. Monday and Tuesday, with a brief sermon between the two, while the evening devotions at 7:30 p.m. Sunday, Mon- day and Tuesday will consist of ros- ary, sermon and Benediction of the Blessed Sacrament. The visiting priest, Father DeBarry, and Rev. Allen J. Babcock, assistant in charge of St. Mary's chapel, will hear confessions Sunday, Monday and Tuesday afternoons, and also after the evening devotions Sunday and Monday. The Forty hours devo- tion which is combined with the re- treat commemorates the 40 hours during which the body of Christ was in sepulchre. Insull Leaves Greece Again On Freighter Says He Expects To Land At Djibouti In French Somaliland May Decide On New Destination At Sea Not Required To Make Statement Of Itinerary For Authorities PIRAEUS, Greece, March 18..- (Sunday)-(P)-Samuel Insull sailed at 12:25 a.m. today aboard the Greek freighter Maiotis, seeking a new ha- ven of refuge from American author- ities. The former utilities fling said be- fore sailing that he expected to land at Djibouti, French Somaliland, at the southern extremity of the Red Sea, and that he would go to Abys- sinia. It was stated here, however, that the fact he did not have a French visa probably would prevent him from getting off at Djibouti. Some persons believed he would make out a new itinerary when he got on the high seas, and would try to keep secret his future plans. The port authorities did not re- quire Insull to make a formal state- ment of his destination and so he can make whatever plans he desires. However, the authorities made a demand that he advise them by wire- less where he expects to land after he arrives at a decision on his des- tination. Insull was brought back to Greece last evening without his knowledge. After a brief time in port, during which he stayed on ship, the 74-year- old fugitive started out again to road the seas in search of a new refuge from American justice. He embarked secretly Wednesday aboard the tramp steamer Maiotis. fe expected then to bhad for the Re Sea. The 75-hour dash for freedom of the man the United States seeks on embezzlement and larceny charges ended at 7:15 p.m. at Piraeus, the port of Athens, where he was told he would have to leave again within 24 . hours. "We sail at midnight for the same destination," said the master of the small Greek freighter, whose return the government demanded technically on the ground that it could not carry passengers and that Insull had vio- lated regulations concerning aliens by his clandestine escape. "Insull is very cheerful and he sends you greetings," the captain told reporters only an hour after Insull reportedly had suffered a new heart attack as a result of a shock upon seeing Greece again. He had not been told that the Mai- otis was returning and had assumed he was miles away from the land that sheltered him for nearly a year and a half against American extradition attempts. Insull realized he had been re- turned only when he went on deck. The sight of this classic land ap- peared to have caused a seizure, but he quickly recovered when his wife and two lawyers boarded the vessel and assured him the Greek govern- ment would not hand him over to the United States authorities. Elect Lovejoy New Head Of Arts Academy Succeeds Prof. Sanders; H. S. Patton Is Chosen As Vice-President Three Faculty Men Are Made Offieers Out-City Members Leave After Hearing Over 300 Short Speeches P. S. Lovejoy and a former member of the forestry school faculty was elected president of the Michigan Academy of Science, Arts, and Let- ters for the ensuing year at the Acad- emy's business session yesterday afternoon. He succeeds Prof. Henry A. Sanders, chairman of the Department of Speech and General Linguistics. The Academy elected Harold S. Patton, head of the economics de- partment of Michigan State College, vice-president for a one-year term to succeed W. A. Kelley, also of Mich- igan State College. Prof. Alfred Stockard of the zoology department was elected editor to take the place of Prof. Peter Okkelberg of the zool- ogy department, who has served the Academy in this position for nine years. Re-election was accorded Prof. Leigh J. Young of the forestry school, as secretary, E. C. Prophet, of Mich- igan State College, as treasurer, and W.W.Bishop, head of the Department of Library Science, as librarian. The several hundred out-city mem-- bers of the Academy who have made Ann Arbor their three-day home de- parted yesterday after hearing nearly 300 short addresses In the fields of anthropology, botany, economics, so- ciology, forestry, geography, geology, mineralogy, history, political science, language and literature, mathematics, philosophy, psychology, sanitary and medical science, and zoology. The reports of the various scotion meetings held yeser'd .1W: Forestry Gilbert Stewart, director of the State forest fire experimental stationt at Roscommon, described advances, that have been made in the use of, the power pump in fighting fires be- fore a meeting of the forestry section yesterday morning. Through improvements in methods and machinery for hydraulic drilling, worked out largely at the RoscommonI station, it has become possible to ob-' tain in eight minutes a well that (Continued on Page 6) Scholarship Is Proono sticated By Examination Sermons For City Churches Are Announced Jackson Prison Chaplain, Slosson, Onderdonk Are Scheduled For Sermons "Crime and Its Preventative Meth- ods" will be the subject of A. M. Ewem, chaplain of Jackson Prison, who will speak at 7:30 p.m. in the West Side Methodist Church. John H. Shilling of the city Y.M.C.A. said that Mr. Ewem will treat his sub- ject from a sociological standpoint. Following the talk will be an informal discussion. "Austria 1918-1934" will be the topic of Dr. Francis S. Onderdonk who is to speak at 10:45 a.m. in the Unitarian Church. Dr. Onderdonk has spent 20 years in Vienna, and is said to be thoroughly conversant with the present situation here. The Liberal Students . Union of the Unitarian Church will meet as usual at 7:30 p.m. with Prof. Preston E. James of the history department, speaking on "Rehabilitation." The Rt. Rev. Herman Page, Epis- copal Bishop of Western Michigan, will deliver the morning sermon at St. Andrews Episcopal Church at 11 a.m. today. Harris Hall students will hold their weekly "Conversatione" at 7 p.m. with Prof. Mehmet Aga-Oglu of the fine arts department, leading the discussion. In the First Methodist Episcopal Church Dr. Frederick B. Fisher will continue his series of sermons on great national leaders, speaking at 10:45 a.m. on "Franklin Roosevelt - Religion and Economic Prosperity," At Stalke Hall the International Student Forum will meet at 3:30 p.m., while the Wesleyan Guild will hold a joint service with the Congregational Student Forum. Prof. Preston W. Slosson of the history department will speak on "The Church as a Promo- ter." Members of Hillel Foundation will hear Rabbi Joseph M. Kornfeld of Toledo deliver the morning sermon at 11:15 a.m. at the League. The classes in "Jewish Ethics" and Dramatic Moments in Jewish History" will meet respectively at 4 p.m. and 7:15 p.m. at the Foundation. All-Campus Swimming Meet Set For Mar. 28 The All-Campus swimming meet will be held at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, March 28, at the Intramural Build- ing. All entries must be in by 5 p.m. March 28. A man may enter only two of the following events: 50 yard free style, 50 yard back stroke, 50 yard breast stroke, 100 yard free style, 100 yard back stroke, 100 yard breast stroke, 75 yard medley and the dive. Ribbons will be awarded to the winner and to the runner up in each event. Michigan Captures Fourth Consecutive Big Ten Swim Title- Iowa Places Second IOWA CITY, March 17. --(A) - The University of Michigan's crack swimming team tonight captured its fourth consecutive Big Ten meet in the University of Iowa pool, scoring 41 points, more than double the amount of its nearest competitor, Iowa, which obtained 20 points. Although the 150-foot pool made the times uniformly slow, three new Conference records were set, two by Michigan and one by Illinois. Taylor Drysdale lowered the Big Ten 150- y a r d backstroke mark to 1:41.6, also breaking the 5 .. M,...' N.C.A.A. long pool TAYLOR DRYSDALE, '4 r e c o r d in the event. The other .- record lowered by the Wolverines was Debaters Tie -0-rc the 400-yard relay For mark. Kamienski, iseonsin Dalrymple, Rob- LACHMANN ertson, and Renner broke Michigan's existing record of 3:44.2 by four- S econd Plac tenths of a second. ______ Captain Chuck Flachmann, of Illi- nois, besides being high point man NOrthwestern Is Winner with three firsts, accounted for the Of Conference League other new irecord when he swam a. 50 yards freestyle in 24 seconds. The In Two- Cay o0mpetitlon eight-year-old mark was :24.1. Flachmann scored all of his team's E:VANSTON, Ill.,, March 17-(Spe- 15 points in one of the greatest indi- cial) -Northwestern's Varsity debat- vidual exhibitions seen in a Con- ing team won the Western Confer- ference meet. His Orientation e e k Tets Accurate Forecasters Student Scholarship Of My Beliefs About Immortality: No. 6: Rabbi Heller' sViews EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the sixth and last of a series of articles on "Im- mortality,"' written by prominent Ann Arbor clergymen. By RABBI BERNARD HELLER (Of the Hillel Foundation) As a devotee of Judaism it is not obligatory for me to subscribe to a doctrine of immortality. There are many Jews who rejected the belief in life after death and yet were not stigmatized as heretics. On the con- trary the writings of some were even included in the canon. If the reader has any doubts on this matter, let him read the book of Ecclesiastes. Despite the intellectual latitude which Judaism accords to its adher- ents particularly in matters meta- physical, I nevertheless am more in- clined to vebr towards belief in im- mortality. I admit that I experience moments of vacillation and doubt as' well as periods of deep conviction, depending of course on the mood and' f1h. ,if1,fmfinn in which T fin1 mself. anguish and affliction are bound to face them, is an indisputable fact. Witness how people with incurable and painful diseases will keep an un- yielding clutch on life even until the very last gasp. The percentage of suicides in any one age constitutes only an infinitesimal fraction of those who continue living with dreary fu- tures ahead of them. The persistence and well-nigh universality of the be- lief would indicate a craving which is undaunted by the unknown ele- ments of a future existence. I am not unmindful of the weighty arguments which have been brought to bear against the validity of the doctrine. I know that its opponents have branded it as a form of super- stition, a vestige of ancestral worship. Its persistence has been termed the product of maudlin sentimentality which expresses itself in our refusal to consider death the end and anni- The results of the examinations given all freshmen during orientation week are fairly accurate in foretell- ing the quality of the student's scho- lastic work in his first year at the University, according to Mrs. C. S. Homer, research assistant in Edu- cational Investigations. Mrs. Horher said that the results of these tests are more accurate than high school records in determining the grade of college work an indi- vidual is likely to do. The quality of the women's future achievements in scholarship is more exactly re- flected than that of men. Entrants to this University made marks lower than those of the jun- iors and seniors of private prepara- tory schools who took th same tests. The average of the pre-law and the pre-medicine entrants was slight- ly higher than that of the ones en- rolling in the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts. This year, because of lack of funds, the psychological test was omitted, and only those in mathematics and English were given. Men and wom- en generally averaged the same in the previous mental examinations, while the women excelled in English, the men were better in mathematics. No noticeable difference was found in the records made by state and out of state students. There is, accord- .v.F- . T/Y _ - v- _ elirl^_ n in n 'Hot Trail' Of Dillinger Grows Cooler Despite Careful Search PORT HURON, March 17.- ({') - of the city in various directions were The "hot trail" of John Dillinger being patrolled. which officers believed they had After 24 hours concentrated search by Royal Canadian mounted, provin- picked up in the fatal gun battle cial, immigration and municipal po- with his Negro escaped companion lice at Sarnia, special squads de- appears to have cooled tonight, al- tailed there to the case were with- though law enforcement officers drawn today, also. throughout this region were pressing Inspector H. U. McCrum, of the their investigation of scores of dews Canadian Immigration Department, and ''tips,''f believed "Canada is the last place Part of the search today was a Dillinger will come." thorough combing of the Negro sec- Hundreds of "dews" poured in on tion in south Port Huron where the Port Huron authorities, but none negro, Herbert Youngblood, and Un- came to anything tangible. Some dersheriff Charles Cavanaugh were residents of the County saw Dillinger fatally wounded when the Dillinger in every passing man and produced ally shot it out with officers who perpetual wild goose chases with their trapped him in a small grocery and alarms. tobacco store. In the hospital Deputy Port Huron police visits to seven Sheriff Howard Lohr continued in a blind pigs around noon onthe out- serious condition. Sheriff William L. side chance that they might pick up Van Antwerp, shot in the arm, was some information about Dillinger only able to aid in the investigation today. resulted in numerous bottles of gin Meanwhile disposition of Young- and other liquors being smashed on blood's body awaited further word the curbs. from a brother in Gary, Ind. Coroner Youngblood told officers, after he