The Weather. Local snows today; tomor- row mostly cloudy. No decided change in temperature. Ldimommod L it igau ~IaitI Editorials The Business Of The Supreme Court .. . Burden Of Proof With Munitions Makers .. . VOL. XLV. No. 66 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, DECEMBER 9, 1934 i PRICE FIVE CENTS a ..... , ,. Cagers Nose Out Ypsilanti For 2nd Win Joslin Sinks One-Handed Shot In Closing Minutes For 2 7-26 Victory 3,500 Fans Witness Thrillng Struggle Wolverines Miss Many Free Throws; Are Weak On Follow-Ups By ARTHUR W. CARSTENS A twisting, one-handed shot from under the'basket made by Dick Joslin in the last two minutes of play gave Michigan's basketball team its second victory of the current season in the game with Michigan State Normal last night at Yost Field House. The final score was 27 to 26. Thirty-five hundred fans saw the Wolverines come from behind in the last five minutes to knot the count at 25-all, slip behind again when Rukamp scored on a free throw, and finally came through with the de- ciding basket. Off To Good Start Michigan started fast running up a 12-4 lead midway in the first pe- riod against a Normal team that showed signs of nervousness in its first game of the season. The Teachers fought back doggedly in the last ten minutes of the first half and suc- ceeded in tying the score, 17 to 17 on a basket by James Dirkse, as the period ended. The Ypsi team continued its rally, into the secondperiod and the Wol- verines found themselves six points behind before they started the win-I ning spurt. Dirkse was the high point man for both teams, with six baskets and two free throws for a total of 14 points. Joslin Shows Improvment Dick Joslin, who showed a great deal more ability in handling him- self than he did last year, led Mich- igan's scorers with three baskets and three-free-throws for nine points. Captain Al Plummer, high scorer against Calvin last week, was runner-j up with three goals from the floor. John Jablonski was playing heads- up ball and contributed a fine floor game while John Gee was practically useless except in getting the tip-off, from Captain Glen Haidt. His ob- viously unintentional foul on RukampI in the closing minutes almost gave: Normal the game. Joslin is a muchj smoother player than a year ago and proved effective under the basket. The Wolverines missed a lot of free throws and showed laxity in following# III International Scene Analyzed By Three Members Of Faculty By MARSHALL D. SHULMAN hundred Hungarians who had been History moved forward by leaps living in Jugoslavia in districts in- anistorydmnEove thforwareb eapsdisputably Hungarian in population and bounds i Europe this week, and were summarily deported, causing confused spectators turned to mem- great hardship. Jugoslavia, by the bers of the University faculty to rend- terms of the Treaty of Trianon of er an interpretive analysis of the 1920, has a legal right to do this,"f crisis.stated Professor Ehrmann. crisis.This treaty assigned to Jugoslavia Professors Howard M. Ehrmann and territories peopled by more than 400,- Preston W. Slosson of the history de- 000 Magyars, who thereby acquired partment and Professor Lawrence Jugoslavia citizenship. In this event Preuss of the political science depart- they were required to leave Jugoslav- ment analyzed the international ia within an additional year. They panorama from their individual were, however, granted the right to: points of view, retain ownership of their immovable Tense relations that have prevailed property and to take their movable on the Jugoslavia-Hungary border property with them. About 27,000 last week culminated in the near- elected not to become Jugoslav citi- warfare condition that followed the zens and have been permitted to re- filing of a protest in the League of main within Jugoslavia only by spe- Nations by Jugoslavia against Hun- cial permission renewed periodically. gary's alleged complicity in the assas- It is these Hungarians who are being: sination of her monarch, Alexander, deported." two months ago in Marseille, Profes- "Third came the charges of raids sor Ehrmann showed.-( of the Chetniks, Serbian armed forces, Six significant developments are upon Hungarian territory, with al- to be seen in the situation. leged intent to incite the Hungarian, "First, Jugoslavia filed a protest troops stationed along the border to1 with the League of Nations charging warfare. that Hungary was guilty of harboring "Next followed the student riots in and protecting conspirators against Hungary. Crying, "Down With Jugo- Jugoslavia. slavia!" bands of students and farm- "The second development came ers united and offered themselves to when, in retaliation, over twenty-five (Continued on Page 3) U~ 1 . 7UT :7~F .. u Freuchen To Give Lecture On Eskimos Danish Explorer Is Next Speaker OnsUniversity' Lecture Series Will Give Informal Talk In Afternoon eague Approves Neutral Force For Saar Patrol Pollock Given PRIE I- CN- Vote Post A Will Have Charge C District Control Bo, In Coming Plebiscite )ver yard Accepts New Post Was Author, Actor, Director Of Film 'Eskimo' And Play Leave Of Absence Given By Ruthven iiDatmn ' Team Meets Albion At 3 Chelsea Tonight ' Will Meet Northwestern, Detroit, And Indiana In Week's Debate A non-decision debate with Albion College tonight in Chelsea will start one of the busiest weeks of the year for the undefeated Varsity debate team which meet the University of Detroit, the University of Indiana, and Northwestern University Tues- day, Wednesday and Thursday, re- spectively, this week. - The Big Ten Conference debate with Indiana will be held at 8 p.m. Wednesday in Hill Auditorium and will be judged by Prof. Harry Wood, director of men's debating at Mich- igan State Teachers College. Mich- igan's affirmative squad, made up of Collins Brooks, '36, Robert Molloy, '37L, and Jack Weissman, '37L, will meet the Indiana negative on the question concerning Federal aid to education. To Debate In Evanston Trace Hospital Poisoning To Chicken Salad in on long shots. The contest with Northwestern, Haidt started the scoring with a which is also a conference debate (Continued on Page 6) it will be held the following night in Evanston. The men to make the trip are Jack Moekle, '35, Abe Zwerdling, Sextet Drops '35, and Edward Litchfield, '36, who will take the negative side of the CTo ,;same question. Prof. Rexford Mitch- Close ame o ell, of Lawrence College, Wis., will: judge the debate. London Tea i1 Tonight and Tuesday the debates will be in the form of practice con- tests in preparation for the two con- Sherf Stars As Michigan ference debates later in the week, AJames McBurney, University debat- - Pucksters Are Defeated ing coach, stated yesterday. No By 3.1 Score judge's decision will be made con- cerning the outcome of either meet. Final Report States Illness Of Nurses Was Caused By Germ In Food Chicken salad served at the Uni- versity Hospital on Oct. 28 contained a germ known as "hemolytic Staphy- lococcus aureus" and caused the wide- spread acute-indigestion illness which attacked nurses and internes after the night meal of that date, it was stated today in a final report prepared by the bacteriological laboratory and issued yesterday by Dr. Harley A. Haynes, director of the hospital. Organism In Salad The report states that the organism apparently was present in the chicken' salad. "It is believed that the salad had not been sufficiently chilled in the ice box during the several steps in its preparation, giving the bacteria a chance to gain a start," the hospital report stated. The germ which caused the food poisoning is of a small, cluster type and is destructive to certain elements in the blood, it was explained. The outstanding features of food poison-I ing by this germ are rapidity of on- set of nausea, vomiting and diarrhea usually in about three hours after eating, and a subsequent complete recovery from these symptoms. Cause Of Eruptions Staphylococci are frequently as- sociated in minor skin eruptions, such as pimples, boils and the more serious carbuncle. It is also to be found many times in dangerous dis- eases. the report stated. This is the first outbreak of food poisoning that has occurred at the University Hospital. Alumni Program Will Be Transmitted To Buffalo An Alumni Association program to be held Wednesday in Morris Hall, will be transmitted by telephone to the University of Michigan Club of Buffalo, according to Emory J. Hyde, '04L, president of the Association. Talks by President Alexander G. Ruthven, Mr. Hyde, Coach "Cappy"j Cappon, and Henry W. Felker, '35E,, will be features of the program. Sev- eral Michigan songs will be played by the Varsity-R.O.T.C. Band. 1 1 , (3 t t c ! i i 1 ii E iT 1 t i t it t { tV S t f x x 2 19 Capt. Peter Freuchen, former gov- ernor of the Phule colony in Green- Professor Believes He Is land, will give a University lecture Only American To Hold tomorrow sponsored by Professor- Election Position Emeritus William H. Hobbs of the geology department, on "The Eskimos Prof. James K. Pollock of the po- As I Know Them." His lecture will litical science department announced take place at 8 p.m. in the Naturald r Science Auditorium. yesterday that he would accept the Cap 0tin Freuchen is famous as an position of president of a district elec- explorer, administrator, and author.: tion board for the Saar plebiscite .In the field of arctic explorations, he I which he was offered early last week was meteorologist of the Danish by the Saar Commission. His leave of Northeastern Greenland expedition absence, effective Jan. 1, 1935, was from 1906 to 1908. Throughout the granted early yesterday afternoon by year 1907 he isolated himself at a I President Ruthven. Professor Pollock station 50 miles from his base, and expects to be gone about a month. became the first person to spend a Professor Pollock, in telling of his winter alone in the North. appointment, said that he believed Was Once Ding's Guide he was the only American to serve on Was Once dKing' Guide the election board. He is to act as a In 1912 he undertook a crossing neutral presiding officer on a district of Northern Greenland, and in 1921, board which will handle the votes of when the King of Denmark made a about 3,000 persons. Professor Pollock trip to Greenland to commemorate expects that about 500,000 of the the 200th anniversary of the founding 800,000 residents of the Saar will vote of Danish Greenland, the King visited I in the plebiscite to be held Jan. 13. Phule with Freuchen as guide. ( Elections Are Specialty In the same year Freuchen servedJ He has made a specialty of elec- as surveyor of the fifth Phule expe- tions, not only in this country, but dition in Arctic America. He was one in Europe as well, paying particular day caught out alone in a blizzard, attention to French and German elec- covered by a snow drift, and suffered tions. Professor Pollock served as a a frozen foot. It was not until 1928, member of the special election com- however; that he lost the foot, when mission appointed by Gov. Wilbur M. gangrene set in, necessitating an am- Brucker in 1931. He spent some time putation at the ankle, and since then in the Saar region during the course another at the knee. of a trip to Europe last summer, He had been enlisted to take part studying the arrangements for the in the third, University of Michigan plebiscite in which the residents of Greenland expedition with Professor the region will decide under whose Hobbs that year, and it was not until political control they prefer to be. Hobbs reached Greenland that he Is University Graduate learned that Freuchen would not be Professor Pollock is a graduate of able to accompany him. the University, having taken his mas- As an administrator, he was gov- ter's degree herein 1921. In 1925 ernor of Phule colony, comprising he received the degree of doctor of most of Northern Greenland, from philosophy from Harvard University. 1913 to 1919. He returned to the University in 1923 Held Film Position after teaching two years at Geneva His authorship covers several scien- College, Beaver Falls, Pa., becoming tific books in Danish and the book, an instructor in the political science "Eskimo," which was translated into department. In 1927 he was raised English in 1931. In 1932 he went to to the rank of professor. Alaska to act as technical adviser A Fellow of the Social Science Re- in the filming of the motion picture search Council in Europe in 1927, by that name, in which he also played Professor Pollock is also a member the role of the inhuman trading cap- of Phi Beta Kappa, Delta Sigma Rho, tain. and Sigma Delta Kappa. He is also "This," said Professor Hobbs of the author of a number of books and Freuchen, "he should never have pamphlets on political parties, cam- done. He is the kindest sort of man paigns, and elections. there ever was." In the matter of his friendship with the Eskimos, he R k M R ia pointed out that Freuchen's first wife, a1 ± n ial by whom he had two children, was In Fo h Ele tio an Eskimo. TOS E etion, His lecture will be illustrated by 4,000 feet of silent film which was The Electoral Board yesterday PROF. JAMES K. POLLOCK Gopher Request Denied By Big Ten Delegates Refuse To Allow Three Seasons Of Competition For Six Gridders CHICAGO, Dec. 8.-- ) - Minne- sota, the powerhouse team that could not be stopped on the gridiron as it mowed down opponents like chaff before a cyclone, was thrown for a heavy loss by a group of learned men today. The faculty representatives. of the Western Conference refused to grant Minnesota's request that six of its regular players be permitted three years of competition in varsity foot- ball. Transferred From Oregon The six players In question trans- ferred to Minnesota from Oregon University after Dr. C. W. Spears, present head .coach at Wisconsin, left the Oregon school to become head coach of the Badgers. The six players all played one year of freshman foot- ball at Oregon, and, according to Big Ten regulations, that year counts as one year of varsity competition in th Western Conference. The intercollegiate football career of Stanley Kostka, Minnesota's great fullback, William Bevan, a star guard, and George Svensdsen, brilliant tackle, were immediately terminated by the Conference ruling today which reaffirmed the freshman rule. All three had a year of freshman foot- ball and a year of varsity play at Oregon before they transferred to Minnesota. Others Set Back a Year The other three, now juniors at Minnesota, were charged with a year of competition by playing freshman football at Oregon and will end their careers next year. They are: Art Clarkson, a ball-carrying halfback, who saw considerable service in the early part of the season; Jay Bevan, center, and Vernon Oech, guard. Under the Western Conference rules, players are limited to three years of athletic competition. If any player attends a school outside the Conference which engages other teams in freshman athletics, that year shall be counted as one of the three (Continued on Page 7) l International Army Will Police Territory Until Plebiscite Jan. 13 French Back Slavs In Balkan Trouble Italy Joins Hungarians In Advocating Revision Of Post-War Treaties GENEVA, Dec. 8-(P)--A secret session of the Council of the League of Nations formally approved today dispatch of an international army to patrol the Saar Territory prior to its plebiscite on Jan. 13. The Council voted to issue official invitations to Great Britain, Italy, The Netherlands and Sweden to con- tribute contingents to the armed forces. The army, officially designated "the international force," will be placed under the direction of the League's Saar Governing Comimission, presi- dent of which is the dynamic Eng- lishman, G. G. Knox. Englishman To Command The size of the army and of the nationalcontributions for its sup- port was to be left to a special com- mittee composed of representatives of Argentina, Italy, Spain, Great Britain, The Netherlands and Swed- en. The supreme commander of the force, the committee decided, would be an Englishman. Switzerland was not invited to par- ticipate as the Council, it was said, gained the impression it did not de- sire to contribute to the maintenance of the force. Premier Mussolini, of Italy, sent his personally picked representative, MaJ. Gen. Sebastian Visconti Prasca, to assist in organizing the international army. League Proud Of Work League officials expressed pride that the organization had now become implemented with real power to en- force peace in Europe. They heard with satisfaction of the statement of Viscount Stanhope, British undersec- retary of state for war, which was construed as signifying that England accepted the idea of "practical sanc- tions. Geneva learned that England was considering the possibility of send- ing tanks ,and machine gun as its contribution to the supervision of the Saar plebiscite. Extreme precautions were taken to- day at the League Palace to protect statesmen attending the Council ses- sion against any possible terroristic activities. The building was swarm- ing with detectives, and photograph- ers wire refused admission to the Council chamber, reportedly because it was feared firearms might be con- cealed in a camera. Officials denied that the restriction was made for this reason. France Supports Jugoslavia, GENEVA, Dec. 8 -(P)- Revision of post-war treaties emerged today as the broad, danger fraught question facing Europe's statesmen, and France took her place squarely beside the Little Entente for preservation of the territorial status quo. Italy, meanwhile, aligned herself with her friend and ally, Hungary, in advocating equitable revision of the peace treaty as the best means of conserving the peace of Europe. As four of Europe's big powers- England, France, Italy and Russia- joined to, urge that the Jugo-Slav- Hungarian trouble growing out of the assassination of King Alexander of Jugo-Slavia at Marseilles be not al- lowed to disturb peace, the problem of the peace treaties rested its threat- ening head behind that central Eu- ropean crisis. Foreign minister Pierre Laval, speaking for France, said dramatical- ly "France stands beside Jugo-Slavia" in this grave conflict and repeated his recent assertion before the French Chamber of Deputies: "Whoever seeks to remove the frontier stone troubles the peace of Europe." Michigan's hockey team sustained its first loss of the current season last night, at the hands of the aggressive, fast-skating Londlon A.C. in the Coli- seum, 3 to 1. Co-Captain Johnny Sherf scored the lone goal for the Wolverines on a successful poke check, which left him in the clear for a front' center shot at the net. The victory was the seventh of the season for the Green and White team from London, Ont., which is leading the Intermediate Ontario Hockey As-: sociation at present, and Coach Cecil Hill's forward line was without a doubt superior to the Wolverine line last night. Michigan perhaps was out- played as much because it was out- substituted as for any other reason. Have More Spares Hill had two teams of approximately: the same strength, and the pace at which these teams kept the game was too hot for the Wolverines. Johnny Sherf was well covered especially by Mills, right wing for the Londoners who skated about as fast as the Calumet flash and constantly mussed up his dashes down the ice with a back check. But despite this fact Sherf still seemed to be the best on the ice and would have scored oftener if it had not been for the good goal tending of barrel-like Goalie! Bennett. Goalie Stops Scoring Bennett's skill was most prominent 1 Undefeated So Far Thus far this semester, the Varsity team has remained undefeated in all its preparatory debates. Mr. Mc- Burney said that the two conference debates this week "will show whether that means anything or not." The subject for all the debates is: Resolved, that the Federal govern- ment should adopt the policy of equalizing educational opportunity throughout the nation by means of annual grants to the several states for public elementary and secondary education. not included in the picture, "Eskimo." Churches Plan Programs With Varied Topics - .ar .- u -,7 ---.. ---..,{ chose William R. Mann to run againstI David Rank for the office of presi- dent of the freshman class. John W. Luecht will oppose Walter J. Truc, Jr., for the chairmanship of the Frosh Frolic in Wednesday's election. Carl Hilty, president of the Under- graduate Council, said that the Board was highly gratified with the num- ber of petitions turned in by stu- dents seeking the class offices. They far outnumbered those turned in by the sophomores he said. The same system for the appoint- ment of dance committee members as is being used in the sophomore' class will prevail for the lower classes. R! ev. Lemon Sermon On On Tip Toe' To Deliver 'The World Gang Of Criminals Operating Like Football Team Captured CHICAGO, Dec. 8 -A)- A crime machine gun, two rifles and a revolv- club whose members executed hold- er. They said that Anselmi admitted ups like football plays was uncovered he was gun custodian for the club. by police today as they questioned 17 They quoted Anselmi as saying: prisoners taken in raids in Austin, "Ten men chipped in $20 each and a western suburb. bought the machine gun. When any- From what they heard tapping one wanted to do a job alone, or with telephone wires, police learned, they some one outside the gang, he could said, that one piece of club equip- rent it for $25 a night." ment was a machine gun any mem- Waiting in a West Side tavern they ber could rent by the night. believed was the club's hangout, What police said was a skillful police received a call from a man diagram for a bank robbery was found who asked to "rent the heater." Trac- in the possession of Ralph Tardi, 20 ing the call they arrested John Still- Consideration of problems ranging from the theological to the political is included in the programs offered' students by Ann Arbor churches to- day. The Rev. William P. Lemon will deliver a sermon on 'The World On Tip Toe" in the service to be held at 10:45 a.m. in the Presbyterian Church. "The World As I See It" is the subject chosen by Dr. W. D. Henderson, director of the University Extension Division, for his talk in the 6:30 p.m. vesper service. The next in the series of lectures on "The Evolution of Religion" will be given by Prof. Arthur E. Boak, who will talk on "The Persecutions" in the service at 10:30 a.m. in the Con- gregational Church. The Rev. Alli- son Ray Heaps will continue his dis- cussion of the career of Jacob with a sermon on "Wrestling With An Aniaoe " Newspaperman Records Thrills, Of His First Flight In Airplane By WILLIAM FERRIS To the Editor: We wonder if there is anyone on your staff who would like to take a 1 free airplane ride, and who would! write a descriptive story about his ' experiences. It should be someone who has never been up in a plane before. Yours, Ann Arbor Air Service To the A.A.A.S.: Why not try me? Yours,I The Fritnr me down more or less intact?" "Well, you never can tell." It was one of the smaller planes, an enclosed affair holding two peo- ple. In order to get in one had to tie oneself into a sort of a knot, roll through a doorway, and then unwind inside. "Can't we get out of this very easily," the driver said, rather happily. The take-off was easy, there was a moment of uncertainty when the supporting air seemed quite too un- substantial, and then the plane and its passenger grew accustomed to sail- ir nnisensomelv 2habvP the earth