The Weather Cloudy Tuesday and Wed- nesday, occasional snow; no decided change in temperature. C, r Bk igait ~~Iat Editorials College Men Do Not Read. . The Red Scare In The Schools.,. VOL. XLV. No. 83 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, JANUARY 15, 1935 PRICE FIVE CENTS New Egyptian Site Assigned To Expedition University Archaeological Group Gets Permission To BeginResearch Kom Abou Billon Is On Upper Nile Delta Director E. E. Peterson To Begin Survey Of Hither- to Uninvestigated Area The newest site for University ex- cavations in Egypt will be Kom Abou Billou, on the edge of the desert close to the upper portion of the Nile Delta, just assigned by the Egyptian gov- ernment to the University archaeolog- ical expedition for excavation. The work at this new site will be prefaced by a preliminary survey which will be conducted within the next two months when the expedition completes its present research at Kom Aushim, ancient Karanis, it was dis- closed in a letter received by Univer- sity authorities from Enoch E. Peter- son, director of the excavations. Kom Abou Billou is regarded as a promising site for excavation, both because the earliest portion of the set- tlement has been left practically un- touched and on the basis of materials known to have been found there, ac- cording to Mr. Peterson, who visited the scene shortly after his arrival in Egypt last fall. New To Investigators This location has not hitherto been systematically investigated by arch- aeologists. The only previous expe- ditions to this section were those led by M. Edouard Naville in 1887-88, who inspected the site and reported upon it for the Egypt Exploration Fund, and by the English papyrologists Grenfell and Hunt. Site of the ancient city of Teren- outhis, Kom Abou Billou is located close to the Rosetta branch of the Nile. The nearest town, Kafr Dawud, situated about one and a half miles north, is on the railway line from Cairo to Ityail el Barud, is forty-five miles northwest of Cairo, and has three thousand inhabitants. The Kom Abou Billou settlement includes two different parts, the Ptol- emaic settlement in the foothills about one mile west of the edge of the present cultivation, and the latter city, of Roman and Arabic times, which was built to the east of the site of the ancient city. The Roman and Arabic city was or- iginally large but has been so com- pletely destroyed by the removal of the earth, rich in nitrogenous mate- rials, for fertilizing purposes that lit- tle of it remains. Educations Untouched It is expected, however, by Mr. Pet- erson, that the excavation and study of the earlier city, dating from Ptol- emaic times, will be "well worth while" inasmuch as it has been practically untouched by the sebakhin, or gath- erers of fertilizer. The site also con- tains, between the Ptolemaic and Roman cities, a cemetery dating from the Ptolemaic period and a small stone temple. While some of the tombs have been robbed many have apparently remained untouched, in modern times. The Cairo Museum is reported to contain a collection of objects, in- cluding jewelry, statuary, and in- scribed grave stelas, which came from the Korn Abou Billou location. Financial support for these excava- tions at Kom Abou Billou has come to the University from an anonymous source; it Was disclosed yesterday at the office of the President. BOX SCORE Present Plan This is the second of a series of proposed forms for a new men's student government, each of which will be printed in The Daily in order to give students an opportunity for expression of criticism on them. Such opinions should be submitted to the Council through The Daily or they Union. PREAMBLE The purpose of the Undergraduate Council on Student Affairs shall be to insure an effective means of communication between the undergraduate body and the University authorities. The prestige of this body, so necessary to its successful operation, shall be secured through strength of personnel gained by the selec- tion of recognized campus leaders from both men's and women's activities and the maintenance of a balance of representation among all undergraduate groups. This Council shall exercise a general supervision over student activities, organizations, traditions, customs, and conduct by means of legislative and judicial action and through the delegation of administrative functions to proper campus agencies. It is recognized, for example, that the Michigan Union and Michigan League are properly qualified to handle jointly class elections; the Union to handle class games; and the League to take disciplinary action for women through its judiciary Committee. Recognizing that it has with the University Administration a common duty in working for the best interests of Michigan and Michigan undergraduates, the Undergraduate Council shall seek to co-operate with the Administration in the exercise of its governmental offices. CONSTITUTION ARTICLE I. - Name This organization shall be known as "The Undergraduate Coun- cil on Student Affairs of the University of Michigan." ARTICLE II. -Objects The objects for which this organization is founded are as as follows: 1. To provide an effective means of communication between the Undergraduate Body and the University Authorities. 2. To exercise a general supervision over student activities, organizations, traditions, customs, and conduct in such a manner as to promote the best interests of the University students. 3. To crystallize and make effective representative undergrad- uate opinion. ARTICLE III. - Powers Sec. 1. Legislative. The Undergraduate Council may make rules and regulations affecting student customs, elections, celebra- tions, ceremonies, special games and contests not under the control of the Athletic board, and the general behavior of the student body, except insofar as the regulation in such matters is now, or hereafter may be provided for by the University authorities. Sec. 2. Judicial. The Undergraduate Council shall set up a Judiciary Committee, composed of the President and four of its male members which shall be elected by the Council. This committee shall have the power to conduct investigations into cases concerning dis- (Continued on Page 6) Wisconsin Defeats In Second Period Scoring 24 Points Team Rally, Harvard .Head Urges Aid To Gifted Students C on an t Believes Fund Should Provide Further Educational Chances CAMBRIDGE, Mass., Jan. 14. - (/P) -- An opportunity for students of real ability to continue their education, re- gardless of financial considerations, and an opportunity for younger mem- bers of the faculty to pursue creative work were urged today by Dr. James Bryant Conant, president of Harvard University, in his annual report. Dr. Conant said that it was his opinion scholarship funds in colleges and universities "should be used in such a way as to enable the secondary school graduates of real ability to con- tinue their education irrespective of the financial status of their parents." While asserting that great universi- ties "must endeavor to find methods of counteracting the centrifugal forces which tend to separate our faculties into an ever-increasing number of subdivisions," Dr. Conant insisted, "there must be no hint of regimenta- tion, no blue-print plan which lays down specifications for cooperative re- search." The Harvard president said he be- lieved language requirements should be modified and Latin eliminated from the requirement for a Bachelor of Arts degree. Cagers Drop ThirdBigTen Game, 34.20, Urge Students To Get Secondf Semester Cards 'Red Tape' Eliminated In Assembly Of Material For Classification Students were urged yesterday by Prof. Daniel L. Rich, director of class- ification, to call at the Office of the Dean of Students, Room 4, University' Hall, to get their registration and classification material for next semes- ter. He said that despite the fact that the material has been ready for stu- dents for three weeks, few have taken advantage of the opportunity. "It is especially important that stu- dents do get this material before the beginning of the examination period," Professor Rich said, "because of the fact that classifications must be ap- proved by respective advisers and most of them have definitely stated that they would not hold consultations during the examination period. A time-saving system to both the students and the University has been instituted by the Office of the Dean of Students in that all of the regis- tration and classification material necessary to the individual student has been filed in individual envelopes under the student's name. Last year the student calling for this material had to go through a good deal of "red tape" before he pro- cured all of the material. Jablonski At Head Of Varsity Scorers Wolverines Lead At Half, But Foul Shooting Is Again Weakness MADISON, Wis., Jan. 14.- (Spe- cial) --The University of Michigan basketball team met its third consecu- tive Conference defeat here tonight, losing to Wisconsin, 34 to 20. Although the Wolverines ran up a narrow 11-10. advantage at the half on a courageous recovery, displaying an easy floor game and successfully holding in check the Wisconsin pass- ing game with its slow break, the Badgers put on the steam min the second period to gain a rapid and easy advantage. John Jablonski, playing a cool floor game at one forward, led the Wol- verine scoring with six points on two field goals and two free throws, while Mike Preboski was tallying nine points to lead the Badger scoring. Michigan was held to six field goals during the game, counting on eight foul throws, but the Wolverines again appeared weak at the foul line, failing to cash in on eleven chances. The Wolverines jumped to an early, lead of 3 to 0 as Jablonski opened the scoring with a free throw, followed by a quick basket by George Rudness, diminutive guard, but the Badgers I put on an offensive which sent them to a 10 to 3 lead as Michigan failed to score. Settling down to a cool game which successfully broke up the Badger of-- fensive, built on a slow break up the floor followed by a long interval of passes between the guards and then a quick break beneath the basket, the Wolverines overcame the Wis- consin advantage to make the score 11 to 10 as the half ended. Another Badger offensive after the. half, which included eleven points by Mike Preboski at a forward and Pete Poser at a guard, immediately put the Wolverines to rout and gave the Bad- gers a lead which Michigan did not again question. Matt Patanelli, starting at center, closely followed Jalonski as high-point man for the Wolverines with five points, three of which were on foul goals. College Editors Score Hearst's Anti-Red Fight NEW YORK, Jan. 14-(A )- The editors of 14 college newspapers to- day issued a statement terming Wil- liam Randolph Hearst's criticism of radicalism in the colleges as "the vanguard of fascism in America." "Mr. Hearst is a menace to the aca- demic freedom which students and faculties have fought so many bitter struggles to preserve," the statement read. "Mr. Hearst declares that he is seeking to keep the mind of youth clean and wholesome. We contend that he is advocating the academic goose-step." The editors characterized the re- cent investigation of radicalism in Columbia and Syracuse universities by the Hearst newspapers as an at- tempt to stir up a "red scare." 1 The statement was signed by repre- sentatives of The Daily Princetonian, Yale Daily News, Vassar Miscellany News, Syracuse Daily Orange, Colum- bia Daily Spectator, University of Pittsburgh News, College of the City of New York Campus, Wisconsin Daily Cardinal, Daily Pennsylvanian, Brown Daily Herald, University of Illinois Daily Illini, Indiana Daily Student, New York University Bulletin, and North Carolina Daily Tar Heel. Soph Committeemen Named By Buesser Fred Beusser, r president of the sophomore class last night announced the names of the class members who will serve on the finance and Soph Prom committees. Al Dewey, Zeta Psi, Nancy Olds, Delta Gamma, and Walker Graham, Great Britain Proposes De al With Germany Abrogation Of Military Clauses Of Versailles Treaty Offered Ask Cooperation In Limitation Of Arms England Hopes To Win Germany Back In Fold Of League Of Nations (Copyright, by Associated Press, 1935) LONDON. Jan. 14.- (A') -Great Britain is willing to enter a swapping deal with Germany - the abrogation of the military clauses of the Versailles Treaty in return for Germany's whole- hearted participation in a general pact for the limitation of armament. This announcement came from an authoritative source after the British Cabinet met today and reviewed the European outlook in the light of the improved atmosphere resulting from the Franco-German agreement of Rome last month and yesterday's. plebiscite by which, it was conceded, the Saar Basin territory voted for re- union with Germany. With these indications of amity as a guidepost, the British laid plans to revive Great Britain's efforts to bring Germany back into the fold at Geneva. Wants Swift Saar Action It was understood tonight that, as, an initial step, .the British Cabinet decided that the League Council should make all possible haste in re-, turning the Saar to Germany, as a result of what is supposed to be an overwhelming vote in the Saar in fa-I vor of return. It was indicated the Cabinet hopes tiat this territory may be re-united with the Reich within the next few days if possible. Although, under the Treaty of Ver- sailles, the League has the right to split up the Saar, retaining districts which have a majority of their votes in favor of the status quo or even giv- ing districts to France if any voted ghat way, it was stated officially that the Cabinet would oppose such di- vision as "impractical." Sir John Simon, foreign secretary, who returned from Geneva just before the Cabinet session and conferredt with Prime Minister J. Ramsay Mac- Donald before the Cabinet ministerst met, is expected to go back to Geneva at the end of the week. Will Talk To Paris Chiefs He is expected to engage in further preliminary conversations there with1 officials of France before Premier Pierre-Etienne Flandin and Pierre La- val, French foreign minister, visit Lon-} don. It was understood, following the Cabinet meeting, that the British Cabinet was informed that Flandin's1 government intended to be more lib-1 eral toward Germany and actually stood ready to accept Germany's pur- ported illegal armament as legal. Great Britain likewise was said to bei ready to recognize and legalize Ger- many's armament. (Under the Treaty of Versailles, of-t fensive weapons were forbidden Ger- many, but during recent months both} Great Britain and France have ac- cused Germany of acquiring suchj armaments "illegally."} Professor Alt Announces Candidacy For Councilt Prof. Glenn L. Alt of the College of Engineering yesterday announced1 his candidacy for the Seventh Ward aldermanic post on the Republican ticket. Professor Alt, who is an expert in structural designing, has done work on the First National Bank building here and for the Washtenaw County Road Commission. He is a graduate of Kansas University. Platform Collapses But The Band Just Doesn't Give A Toot MILAN, Mich., Ja. 14. - (Special) - Even the collapse of a temporary platform of two-inch planks failed to halt a concert by the University of Michigan Band in the auditorium of the high school here tonight, as part of the Milan Concert Series. The bandsmen had assembled, a s'ore of them on a wooden addition to the small stage, when three large temporary supports gave way and plunged .the startled musicians five feet to the floor in a small avalanche of music racks, instruments, chairs, and a rain of music and programs. Confusion in the audience of sev- eral hundred ceased when the grin- ning bandsmen, none of whom were injured, righted themselves and their equipment and gave the concert from the auditorium floor. Playing for the first time under the baton of Bernard B. Hirsch, acting conductor, the band game a program of classical and semi-classical num- bers and several contemporary works. Features of the program were the "On the Trail" movement from Ferde Grofe's "Grand Canyon Suite" and selections from. Lehar's opera, "The Merry Widow." Mr. Hirsch led the organization in two encores in re- sponse to enthusiastic applause. CannibalismIs Seen In Wierd Double Slaying Negro Held In Mob-Proof Jail When Charges Link Him With Murders.. JACKSON, Miss., Jan. 14-() - Cannibalism took front place today in the investigation of James H. Coy- ner, huge Negro grave robber, charged with the brutal double slaying in Cleveland, Miss., early in December, of Aurelius B. Turner and his wife. Startling charges were made by county attorney E. H. Green, which he said tended to link the six-foot- four-inch, 200-pound Negro with the, fiendish slaying and furnished the basis for his cannibalism charge. "Portions of human flesh," said Attorney Green, "salted and cured, and with what appeared to be teeth1 marks, have been found at Coyner's home." Announcement of the wierd discov- ery was made following the question- ing of the Negro in his cell in the mob-proof Hinds County jail where he was rushed after his arrest in' Cleveland Saturday and after Bolivar County authorities had filed formal request for an order permitting ex- humation of the Turners' bodies to compare missing portions with the flesh assertedly found in Coyner's home. Green hinted that cannibalism might be advanced as a possible mo- tive for the gruesome slaying. The bodies of Turner and his wife. were found horribly mutilated in their small Bolivar County home the night of Dec. 9. BULLETIN LANSING, Jan. 14 -(')- The Sen- ate tonight voted that a committee selected from its membership should conduct an investigation of the re- cent recount of the ballots cast last Nov. 6 in Wayne County. Model Identifies BrunoAs One Who STrailed Condon 0 f Suspect Was Shadowing Condon In Railway De- pot, Witness Claims 6 Experts Concur In Opinion On Script Handwriting Authorities Believe Hauptmann To Be Author Of Notes FLEMINGTON, N. J., Jan. 14 -(A') --A pretty pajama model today ac- cusedrBruno Hauptmann of shadow- ing Dr. John F. Condon. The model, chic and stately Hilde- garde Olga Alexander, enlivened a trial session otherwise devoted to ad- ditional expert testimony accusing Hauptmann as the man who wrote the fourteen ransom notes. A friendi of Dr. Condon's for 12 years, she took the stand at Haupt- mann's trial for the murder of the Lindbergh baby to say she saw "Jaf- sie" in a Bronx telegraph office in March of 1932, nearly a month be- fore Dr. Condon paid the $50,000 ransom, and that another man was watching him "very significantly." "I say the man was Bruno Richard' Hauptmann," she declared firmly. A faint flush stole over the car- penter's pallid face. His wife turned white. Arches Eyebrows Petulantly Miss Alexander, who arched her fashionable eyebrows petulantly at the barbed queries of Edward J. Reil- ly, chief of Hauptmann's defense, provided a bright interlude in the testimony of two handwriting experts who again called Hauptmann the ransom note writer. Today the word of Albert S. Os- born, the internationally known ex- pert who last Friday accused Haupt- mann as the ransom writer, was bol- stered by that of Elbridge W. Stein, another authority on disputed docu- ments.. Stein's cross-examination ended when court adjourned for the day. Both said they believed the ran- som notes and Hauptmann's con- ceded writing were the work of the same man. Osborn, white-haired and unruf- fled, went further than that. He parried defense thrusts at his record with the remark that his testi- mony had been overruled perhaps once in 20 times - "so infrequently that it always gives me a shock." Then he said the likness between Hauptmann's hand and that of the ransom notes is "irresistable, unan- swerable and overwhelming." The florid Reilly hammered away hard at Miss Alexander, who said she was 26 and a model for "tea gowns, negligees and pajama ensembles." He failed to shake her identifica- tion of Hauptmann as the man she saw in the Fordham station and of the New York Central and again on the street two or three evenings later. At one point, irked by state ob- (Continued on Page 2) Maps, TaXes To Be Subjects Of Lecture Series Two University Lectures were an- nounced yesterday by the office of Dr. Frank E. Robbins, assistant to President Alexander G. Ruthven. Dr. Ervin J. Raisz, instructor in carto- graphy at the Institute of Geographi- cal Exploration at Harvard, will speak today on "The Development of Ge- ography As Reflected in Maps," and Prof. Edwin B. Stason of the Law School will speak Friday on "Tax Revision." Hungarian by birth, Dr. Rai'sz took undergraduate work in Architecture in that country, and during the war served in the geographical service of the Austrian army. In 1923 he came to Columbia for graduate work in geology. Speaking of his work there, Prof. Preston E. James of the geog- raphy department said: "The ideas which have led to Dr. Raisz's im- provements in the technique of map- making were implanted by the teach- ings of the late William Morris Dav- is, dean of American cartographers." Following work at Columbia as a student. Dr. Raisz taught a course in Michigan (20) Jablonski, f.. Tomagno, f Patanelli, c ... Plummer, g ... Rudness, g .... Joslin, f ....... Teitelbaum, f. Gee,c ......... Evans, g . Meyers, g ..... FG FT . .. . .. . .. . 2 1 2 . .. . ... . . ...0 20 ,. . . . . . .. . . 1 3 . .. ... . .. ...1 1 0 0 .1.. .. ..0 0 1 0 TI' 6 0 5 2 2 3 0 0 0 2 20 German Expatriates, Teachers In New School, To Speak Here Alaskan Colonization Project Impracticable, Says Prof. Dow ....6 8 Totals.......... Wisconsin (34) Preboski, f............ Demark, f ..... .... . Stege, c............. Poser, g ............., McDonald, g .......... Jones, c. .............. Smith, f .............. Fuller, f ............ Duboski, f ........... Rprnov C. . FG FT ....4 1 ....2 1 . ...0 1 ....3 1 ....1 1 ....2 0 .....0 1 ....0 0 ....0 0 - 0 1 TP 9 5 1 7 3 4 1 0 0 1 Two members of the New School For Social Research of New York - "The University in Exile" - will speak Wednesday in Ann Arbor, bringing with them the intellectual equipment gained in Germany, and the experi- ences of exile from their fatherland subsequent to the coming into power of the Hitler regime. These men, Dr. Emil Lederer and Dr. Edourd Heimann, both of whom are professors of economics in German universities, now hold teaching posi- tions in the New York institution which has as its "raison de vivre" the provision of hospitality to scholarsI who have been deprived of the oppor- freedom in society at large; and with- out intellectual freedom the demo- cratic system under which we live cannot long endure," declare the sponsors of the school. German professors, all of whom were forced to leave their country either because they were Jews or ad- vocated policies contrary to the Fas- cist program, make up the entire fac- ulty of the New School. In the name of tolerance and freedom it has open- ed up its doors to a limited number of German political scientists, sociol- ogists, and economists, and author- ities there hope that it will be able to offer a haven to more in the near. That the Federal proposal to move mid-western farmer-drought victims next spring to a colony in Alaska in groups of 100 families each will not better the farmers' condition enough over a period of years to warrant the move, was the statement made by Prof. Dow V. Baxter of the School of Forestry and Conservation in an inter- view yesterday. The plan to colonize Alaska with these drought-stricken farmers in small units of 100 families each is said to have been definitely approved by Federal officials. The government has already spent $100.000 in survey- for the transplanted farmers, but I seriously doubt if this market will be sufficient if a relatively large number of families take advantage of the proposal," stated Professor Baxter, who has been on two recent expedi- tions to parts of the territory being considered for colonies. He spoke highly of the fertility of the soil, but said that the number of products that can be grown is exceed- ingly limited. Further, he stated that the farmers must find a market for their crops in order to exchange them for other necessities. "Alaska," Pro- fer axter said. "offers greant nos-