The Weather Snow, possibly some rain, colder in central portion and north; colder Wednesday. C, r it iga-4 d ii Editorials What Youth Has Accomplished ... 'There Are Still Giants In The Land'. VOL. XLV. No. 74 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1934 PRICE FIVE CENTS - - - - Incitement Of Army,NavyBy RedsCharged Officers Demand Law T Punish All Communis Agitators Girl Decoys Used To 'Convert' Mei Propaganda Is Smuggled Onto Ship And Hidden For Later Discovery WASHINGTON, Dec. 18. - ()- Attempts by Communists to spread dissatisfaction and even mutiny and rebellion among the nation's armed forces were reported today by Army and Navy officers to be causing real "concern." As a concrete remedy, they asked the House committee investigating un-American activities to approve a law permitting punishment of those who urge any soldier or sailor to "vio- late his oath of allegiance." Chairman John W. McCormack, Massachusetts Democrat, reported that various remedies were being con- sidered by the Committee but none had been agreed upon. The Communistic Army-Navy cam- paign was described by Commander V. L. Kirkman, of the Navy, as care- fully planned and supervised -from headquarters in New York City. Other witnesses have asserted that the New York headquarters took orders from Moscow. Organized Drive Seen "The present drive that is causing us concern," Kirkman testified, "takes the form of spreading subversive propaganda by organized groups among the organized forces in an endeavor to incite the personnel to dissatisfaction, disaffection, disloyalty and in some cases actual sabotage." He submitted a number of exhibits leaflets and pamphlets purportedly from Communistic sources and cir- culated in the Navy - which, he said, "actually incite to mutiny, rebellion, sabotage and assassination." As to the methods of getting "prop- aganda" into the hands of sailors, Kirkman gave this detailed version of one system: "Small groups of say two men and three girls will come aboard ship with the regular crowd of visitors and sightseers. Men of this group will circulate about the decks, stuffing their handbills into boats, behind ven- tilators, and so on, where members of the crew eventually find them. "Meanwhile, the girls of the group - chosenor their good looks - will be picking out promising-appearing enlisted men, engaging them in con- versation with the object of making dates with them ashore and working on them there to convert them to the 'cause' and thus gain a recruit within the ship's company." First Efforts Noticed In 1930 Fist attempts to "undermine the morale of the Navy," Kirkman added, were noticed in 1930. But where only an occasional leaflet had turned up then, Kirkman said that now the ac- tivity is better organized and the agi- tators better trained. "No matter where the fleet may go,", Kirkman said, "we find, usually, that the agitators have arrived ahead of it."' Just before Kirkman took the stand, Brig. Gen. Alfred T. Smith, chief of the War Department Intelligence Service, told of the Army's experi- enc'es. Inethe land forces, he said, Com- munistic propaganda sometimes is distributed by children, and not only among the Regular Army but also the' Reserve Officers' TrainingsCorps, the National Guard, Citizens Military Training Camps and the Civilian Con- servation Corps. Smith quoted from instructions to Communist organizers directing thems to "penetrate the armed forces and organize inside" and "enlist a few comrades directly into the Army." Hel added, however, that Army Commu- nistic efforts in general "have not met with a great deal of success." Priest Is Sentenced For Perjury In Divorce Case1 SAN ANTONIO, Dec. 18-(R)-The Rev. W. D. Welburn, Jr., handsome young clergyman who testified in al divorce case directed against him lastl June that he had never married, was1 sentenced to seven years' imprison- ment today on a charge of perjury. "I will file an appeal," said Wel- A Letter From Dean B -i sle To the Editor: The editorial in this morning's "Daily," commenting upon the action taken yesterday by the University Committee on Student Affairs on the question of a new plan of student government, came as a distinct shock to me. What the Committee desires, and what it voted to ask the Undergraduate Council to obtain, is a wide- spread and unbiased opinion on the plan submitted by the Stu- dent-Faculty Committee of the Union and any other plans which may be proposed. The time of the meeting was taken up in trying to determine the best and fairest way of obtaining such opinion and it was finally decided to ask the Undergraduate Council to undertake this task. There was no criticism of the Union plan as such, since its details were not even read in full, much less discussed. The members of the Student-Faculty Committee of the Union have spent much time and thought on the matter of student gov- ernment, and the plan drawn up by them deserves careful and courteous consideration, whether one approves of all its pro- .visions or not. To thrust it aside as the proposal of a selfish, politically minded group is both unfair and discourteous. The plan should be judged on its merits and not on its parentage. Finally as Chairman of the Committee on Student Affairs I seriously object to the statement in today's editorial with refer- ence to the way in which certain members of the Committee voted. If, in the meetings of any committee, a member can not be free, to express his honest opinion on a subject, or to vote as he thinks best, without having the confidence of the committee room vio- lated and his actions publicly criticized in the press, such meetings become farces, and no self-respecting person will be willing to take part in them. Joseph A. Bursley, Chairman University Committee on Student Affairs. Col. Whelen Shown Linked To Arms Firm Remington Co. Planned To Increase Sales By Officer's Article Was PaidITo Write Propaganda Story Second Officer Disclosed As Having Solicited Ads From Arms Company I YCouncil Will Assemble For Opinion Survey Undergraduate Group To Get Student Decision On New Government Members of the Undergraduate Council will assemble at 5 p.m. today in the Council Room of the Union for the purpose of organizing a sur- vey of campus opinion upon the plans for a new men's student government which have been referred to the Coun- cil by the Senate Committee on Stu- dent Affairs and upon which may be based a final plan to be returned to the committee by the Council. Under the terms of the instructions and recommendations accompanying the plans submitted by the committee. the Council is to choose from among them, to draw from them in the con- struction of a new form of govern- ment, or to discard them entirely and formulate an entirely new plan. Coun- cil action is to be based upon the findings of the survey. In the constructon of the new con- stitution for men's student govern- ment the Council is to take into con- sideration the opinions of various campus groups according to the com- mittee's instructions. In securing these expressions of opinion it was suggested that all schools and col- leges be contacted through their in- dividual governing bodies and that the opinion of fraternity men be secured from house presidents through the Interfraternity Council. In order that lnepndent opinion might also be secured it was recom- mended that a zoning system, similar to that employed by the League in giving representation to non-affiliat- ed women, be employed for that pur- pose. Attempts Are Made T o Stop Execution HULL, Eng., Dec. 18.- (.) Though telephone and telegraph lines to London hummed with urgent pleas of mercy, it seemed almost certain this evening that Mrs. Ethel Lille Ma-E jor, 42 years old, would go to the gallows - at Hull Prison tomorrow morning. The tall, angular woman, almost ascetic in appearance, was sentenced to death for the poisoning of her truck-driver husband, with whom she had lived 17 years. If the sentence is carried out as scheduled at 9 o'clock tomorrow morning - and the customary hoist- ing of the black flag over the prison wall will tell when she dies - Mrs. Major will be the first English woman to go to the gallows since 1926. A jury's recommendation that she! be given mercy was overruleduby the Homne Secretary's Office, but Lord Mayor Stark, of Hull, today added his plea to the widespread appeals that she be not allowed to hang. Third Sorority In Past Month Looted By dinner Burglar For the third time in the past month, a sorority house last night, entertained an unexpected visitor during a dinner party.- While the women were at a formal dinner last night, a thief broke into the Alpha Phi sorority house, 1830 Hill St., entering by means of the fire escape and a second story window. He then ransacked several rooms, escap- ing with more than $30. Police were called immediately, but could find no clues. It was believed, however, that this robbery was com- mitted by the same person who earlier this month robbed the Pi Delta Phi and Delta Delta Delta sororities, ef- fecting the robbery in exactly the same manner, and while the mem- bers were at dinner. Among the guests at the sorority at the time of the robbery were Dean and Mrs. Edward H. Kraus, Prof. Arthur L. Cross of the history depart- ment, and James E. Kallenbach of the political science department. Police last night warned all fra- ternities and sororities to take the strictest precautions against the re- currence of another such robbery. Insulls Fiohting Case IniState, Federal Courts Samuel Offers Plea Of Not Guilty As Martin Opens' His Defense CHICAGO, Dec. 18 -()- Samuel and Martin Insull carried on their "fight for vindication" in Federal and state courts today. Samuel declared his innocence of a breach of the bankruptcy laws when arraigned before Judge James H. Wilkerson in the same Federal court room where he and 16 co-de- fendants were acquitted in a mail fraud case Nov. 24. Martin began his defense against charges of embezzling $344,720 and prepared to take the witness stand himself in the criminal court cham- ber of Judge Cornelius J. Harrington. Attorneys for Samuel, his son, Samuel, Jr., and eight business as- sociates entered formal pleas of "not guilty" to the accusation of trans- ferring assets of the Corporation Securities Co. in 1931 just before the concern collapsed. An immediate showdown, regarded by Samuel Insull as another step in his avowed "fight for vindication," was precluded when Judge Wilkerson postponed trial indefinitely at the in- stance of District Attorney Dwight H. G. Green. Judge Harrington overruled a mo- tion for a directed verdict of ac- quittal for Martin Insull, younger brother of Samuel and former head of the two-billion-dollar Middle West! Utilities Co. The defense then opened its efforts to prove that Insull broke no awsin 0vf'hr 1A21 x wrn , VfiA- WASHINGTON, Dec. 18. -() - A Remington Arms Co. plan to in- crease its foreign sales by hiring a ranking American Army officer to prepare a magazine article for pub- lication abroad was revealed today in the Senate's investigation of muni- tions makers. Lieut. Col. Townsend Whelen, still in the service and expecting to do some work for the company upon his retirement a few months from now, was the author. He was requested to write the article in a letter which described it frankly as "propaganda," and the company's attitude as "en- tirely selfish." Meanwhile, what was described as an optimistic report on possibilities for an international agreement pro- viding stringent control of the muni- tions traffic was given President Roosevelt by Hugh R. Wilson, min- ister to Switzerland. Officer Solicits Ads Before the Senate committee, other documents and oral testimony during the day disclosed: That the Remington Arms Co. was solicited for advertising in the Army and Navy Journal by a second Army officer, Lieut. B. R. Chadwich, on stationery of the War Department. That Whelen was compensated for the article, which company officials said they thought never was pub- lished, and other writings at a "small hourly rate." That Whelen declined a position with the company because "sore- heads in Congress" had enacted a law cutting off the retirement pay of Army officers taking employment with firms selling to the government. Advisory Office Planned That upon his retirement Whelen expects to open an office in Wash- ington as a consulting ordnance en- gineer, in which capacity he feels he can "go anywhere and do anything" the company desires andstill retain his retirement pay of $375 a month. In addition the committee today! began an inquiry into the source of gangsters' machine guns by directing the Winchester company to produce all records of their machine-gun sales, over the protest of company officials that they did not manufacture such weapons. From Irenee du Pont the Senate in-F vestigators received a series of charts,1 which he explained as showing that the price charged the government for gun powder during the war actually was below the pre-war rate, despite a tremendous jump in costs of raw ma- terials. Japan To Act On Question Of Navy Pact Adjournment Of London Conference Is Scheduled For Thursday Japan Blamed( For Failure Of Parley F r a n c e Foresees Naval Race With Italy; Also Raises Army Budget (By Associated Press) The focus of world naval negotia- tions shifted rapidly from London to- day to Tokio, where Japan's Privy Council gathered solemnly with the emperor to advise him on abrogation of the Washington Treaty of 1922. Formal adjournment of the London conversations was scheduled for Thursday. Blame for their break- down has been placedrby the Amer- icans squarely on ambitious Japan, with her demands for naval parity with Britain and America. London heard Japan was consid- ering postponement of the enuncia- tion till next week, but diplomats in- sisted the exact date of the action was immaterial. Repercussions Seen Elsewhere in the world the ap- proaching end of the treaty and its sister document, the London Pact, stirred repercussions. TOKIO - The government cabled Ambassador Tsuneo Matsudaria in London instructions that Japan hopes that resumption of the conferences be included in the communique an- nouncing adjournment of the Lon- don conversations. Japan, it was re- vealed, wants to set the date for re- newal of negotiations. PARIS - A naval race between France and Italy was forecast by Francois Pietri, minister of the navy, who said he expects Premier Musso- lini's proposal to construct two 35,000- ton battleships would force France to ship construction. PARIS, Dec. 18 -(P) --Foreign Minister Pierre Laval solemnly as- sured Adolf Hitler today that France is not trying to isolate Germany as the Chamber of Deputies tossed an- other 800,000,000 francs (about $52,- 800,000) into Premier Pierre Flander's war chest. Sees Danger The emergency army appropriation rounding the 1935 military budget of 12,000,000,000 francs, will be sent to strengthen France's fighting regime against what the Premier calls "the danger from abroad." Laval's new gesture toward Hitler came while the Senate was debating the foreign affairs budget. Sisto Was Returning Oslo After Cruise Great Lakes Ports Gives Resignation -Associated Press Photo. LAWRENCE "BIFF" JONES Coach Resigns After Conflict With Senator Known To Be Result Of Row Over Long's Not Giving Team Talk BATON ROUGE, La., Dec. 18 -(P) -Dr. James M. Smith, president of Louisiana State University, tonight announced the resignation of Capt. Lawrence "Biff" Jones as coach of the university football team. The resignation was a culmination of a conflict in authority between Jones and Sen. Huey P. Long, who claimed the team as "his own." Dr. Smith said the resignation was effective Jan. 1 and that Jones' as- signment to the university by the War- Department as an assistant professor of military tactics would not be af- fected by the change. Dr. Smith declined to comment further on the reason for the Army captain's resignation. It was com- monly known to be the result of a row between the coach and Senator Long when the Senator was forbidden to give the L.S.U. team a "pep talk" between halves of the Oregon game last Saturday. Jones was reported hunting ducks in the Louisiana marshes and could not be reached for a statement. Resigfns Post As Chief Of Saar Police W a s Criticized By Nazi Press In Auto Incident Following Party SAARBRUECKEN, Dec. 18.- (') - Maj. Arthur G. Hemsley, head of the international police force in the Saar, resigned the position today. Reports that the giant forty-two- year-old Englishman might quit his post were current here yesterday after Capt. James Justice, Fnglish member of the Saar police force and Major. Hemsley's close friend, was beaten by a mob that attacked him after his automobile had struck and slightly in- jured a woman Sunday. As inspector of police and gen- darmerie in the Saar, Maj Hemsley directed the military arm of the League of Nation's commission gov-; erning the Saar Basin pending the plebiscite Jan. 13, when the region de- cides its future national allegiance. In addition to his duties as head of the international police force Hemsley was chief of police and the landjager; (gendarmes). Under heavy fire from the Nazi element in the Saar from the day he took office, Hemsley had passed off previous attacks with great good hu- mor. His friendship with Justice, who was suspended pending police investi- gation of the circumstances sur- rounding the mob attack Sunday, caused him to be sharply criticized ABOARD S.S. EUROPA, AT SEA, Dec. 18.- (') -Sixteen men were successfully taken off the stricken Norwegian freighter Sisto tonight and transferred in tossing seas to the liner New York. The Sisto was left in a sinking con- dition,'with one feeble light burning. The two liners Europa and New York, which had been standing by in the storm-tossed mid-Atlantic, pro- ceeded to their ports of destination, the crews elated over the rescue. NEW YORK, Dec. 18. -- () - Rag- ing seas thwarted tonight the rescue of the crew of 17 of the Norwegian freighter Sisto as the ship wallowed helplessly in one of the Atlantic's worst storms, her rudder, bridge and lifeboats washed away. The Sisto called at Detroit and other Great Lakes ports in the au- umn and, late in November, sailed from Quebec for Oslo. The British tanker Mobiloil was standing by after a day of fruitless efforts. The North German Lloyd liner Europa, swerving off its course, ploughed through the treacherous seas to the scene of distress-600 miles north of the Azores. The Cun- ard-White Star liner Aurania also sped to the Sisto's aid. The freighter was listing badly. Its superstructure was battered in from stem to stern. All day long the Mobiloil kept pour- ing oil on the-mountainous waves to the lee of the Sisto. Within a few hours of nightfall, its supply was giv- ing out and the seas had not subsided. Nazi Officials Deny Attempts To Kill Hidler Reports Are Termed As Ridiculous Inventions In Denial BERLIN, Dec. 18. --(P)- Adolf Hitler has not been wounded, it was efficialy said today, nor has anyone shot at Der Fuehrer. Those were the denials Nazi offi- cials had ready for the rumor that the Reich leader had been near as- sassination. "Ridiculous invention," the reports were termed. The rumor that Hitler was dead reached Berlin today almost at the same time from three such widely- separated directions as Austria, Rus- sia, and Holland. LINZ, Austria, Dec. 18. - (P) - To- day's issue of the newspaper Linzer Volksblatt said that Chancellor Adolf Hitler had been wounded by a re- " volver shot fired by a girl in Berlin. The newspaper, declaring it had the story from a trustworthy source, said the girl was the daughter of Leader Brueckner of the Silesian Provincial Nazi party and that she went to Ber- lin after her father's arrest Monday in Hitler's "morals drive." There, the newspaper stated, she fired a shot from a taxi as it passed Hitler's car. The girl and her taxi driver were killed by Hitler's guards, the news story said. Murderer, In Daze, Testifies In Court George Hawley, Jr., convicted mur- derer of Mike Cerwinka, contradicted himself more than six times yesterday when he was questioned in Justice W. H. Payne's court regarding the implication of Mrs. Cerwinka in the crime. Questioned by' Mrs. Cerwinka's at- torney, Frank DeVine, and Prosecutor Albert Rapp, Hawley refuted and 16 Taken From Ship By Liners S. S. New York Succeeds In Rescue Of Crew Of Norwegian Freighter Storm Tossed Sea Hinders Rescuers To Of Adjourn Bribery Case; To Be Resumed Dec. 281 EXPLOSION KILLS ONE HENDERSON, Ky., Dec. 18 -()- An explosion in a coal mine of the' Three Rivers Coal Company, at Spottsville, 10 miles east of here, to- day killed at least one miner, William Cate, of Henderson, and seriously in- jured another, William Edward Smith,! who was badly burned. Meanwhile the fate of eight others trapped in the mine by the explosion late this afternoon was undetermined. 7 ,1 r f t i LANSING, Dec. 18 -(P)- The Dan- iels-Kanar legislative bribery case stood adjourned tonight until Dec. 28 with testimony in Municipal Court that the alleged "deal" had been called off after the Hotel Kerns dis- aster. Municipal Judge Sam Street Hugh- es adjourned the case at the request of former Rep. Walter P. Kanar, of Hamtramck, to permit the latter to obtain counsel. At the time of the adjournment the state had completed its case. Special Features For Summer Session Announced By Hopkins By DAVID G. MACDONALD With some special funds in addi- tion to the regular budget already voted, the 1935 Summer Session of the University will include several new features and promises to be one of the finest yet seen, Prof. Louis A. Hopkins, director, declared in an in- terview yesterday. Among the special features to be instituted or carried on next sum- mer will be the enlargement of the camp of forestry and conservation, the establishment of relations with the State Department of Conserva- tion through the department of ge- ography, the continuance of the Physics Symposium, and a new sym- posium in engineering. Prof. Kenneth C. McMurry, chair- man of the geography department, will lead a gr'oup of students in aI of the University on Sugar Island. In addition to the special trips, all the summer camps of the University will be conducting summer sessions. These include the Biological Station near Cheboygan, the surveying camp in Wyoming, the forestry and con- servation camp in the upper penin- sula, and the geography and geology camp in Kentucky. There will be the usual number of visiting faculty members on campus and in the camps for the Summer Session, Professor Hopkins declared. In the physics and engineering sym- posiums there will be visiting profes- srs frnm Eirnnan~n i i, , itiPC dnn .. paium eaunvers es, anain inheGerman press, wich asser ed several visiting attorneys and profes- he was present at the night club party sors will conduct courses in the Law that preceded the incident. School during the summer period, he - stated. sDetective Sails To All schools and colleges of the Uni-