The Weather PFF tY G Jilts i0gan ii.attij Editorials Partly cloudy and contin- ued cool Sunday. Occasion For Sentiment .. . Spring Homecoming Gains In Favor... VOL. XLV. No. 157 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, MAY 5,1935 PRICE FIVE CENTS Unsanitary Conditions In 3_Cafes Boesky's, The Hut, And Walker's Fail To Pass Health Requirements Approval Extended To 40,_Says Gates Cards To Be Displayed By Restaurants Designating ApprovedRating The failure pf three campus eating houses to pass a sanitary inspection test was announced yesterday by Dr. Lloyd R. Gates, deputy health offi- cer. The places named were The Hut. Boesky's Restaurant, Alva C. Walker's boarding House, 611 Church St. The announcement came following an inspection of 43 eating places in the vicinity of the campus by Dr. John A. Wessinger, city health officer, Frank Meyers, sanitary inspector, and Dr. Gates. Another inspection of the three places that were refused approval will be made in a few days in order to determine whether they had corrected the conditions which led to the unani- mous refusal of the inspecting board to grant them a card denoting ap- prova. Each approved eating place re- ceived a card showing that it was approved by the city health depart- ment and fulfilled all sanitary re- quirements. The card bears the sig- nature of Dr. Wessinger and is to be displayed in a prominent place. In order to obtain a card, the res- taurants had to fulfill the following requirements: serve pasteurized milk directly from the bottle, provide pro- per toilet and washing facilities, keep premises clean and building in good repair, have proper screening and no flies or vermin, adequate ventila- tion and light, food protected from contamination, clean equipment, utensils properly washed and steril- ized, proper refrigeration, garbage and . rubbish disposal facilities, pe- riodic health examination of em- ployees, see that employees follow rules of personal cleanIness, and re- lease. employees from duty when in- fected with possibly contagious dis- eases. Inspection of the remainder of the restaurants and eating places in the city will be made this week, Dr. Gates said, and cards will be issued those that pass the requirements. He added that boarding houses are being in- cluded in the inspection as well as soda fountains. The following places- received ap- proval in the first inspection, com- pleted Friday: Baltimore Dairy Lunch, White Spot Hamburger .(517 E. William St. branch), Hans Ger- man American, Harmony Cafeteria, Hepler's Lunch, the Savoy, Drake Sandwich Shop, Granada Cafe, Red Hots, Mary Lee Fountain Service, the Union, Chubbs, Freeman's Board- ing House, Perry's Cafe, Haunted Tavern, R and S Restaurant, With- am's, Lighthouse (all branches), Mil- ler's Dairy Products, the League, and the Pilgrim Shop. The Tavern, Parrot, Superior Dairy Lunch, Starbuck Lunch, Coffee Shop, Lantern, Campus Inn Restaurant, Ivory's, Harrison's, Hill Billy Inn, Calkin's Fletcher (Store No 3, the others have not been inspected yet), Cutting Cafe, London's, Den, Snappy Service, Mrs. Wilson's Boarding House, and Wikel Drug Co. Omaha Gallops To VictoryIn Derby CHURCHILL DOWNS, LOUIS- VILLE, Ky., May 4. - (P} - Gallant son of a. gallant sire, William Wood- worth's Omaha stretched his long legs today on the cold, rain-drenched surface of the historic Downs oval and galloped to a smashing victory in the 61st Kentucky Derby. While a thoroughly soaked but highly excited crowd of nearly 50,000 spectators roared their acclaim, the big, gangling chestnut colt adminis- tered a sound beating to 17 rival three-year-olds, including the crack filly favorite, Nellie Flag and dupli- cated the triumph of his famous sire Gallant Fox, winner of the 1930 Der- by, for the New York banker, whose colors Omaha also car-ried this after- noon. Running with much the same con- fidence his daddy showed five years ny , (~nmhn. steeredclearp'of the Modern Mechanical Contraptions Give Win To Old Game A variation in the modern tempo of the "dump the baby" favorite of county carnivals is an event to be held this afternoon at the Municipal Air- port. Once you were asked to throw base- balls at a target and thus release a catch that dumps the "baby" into water below, but now, what with mod- ern conveniences and all, you drop bombs upon him from an altitude of 500 feet. Dressed in an overseas helmet and football shoulder-pads (among other things, that is) the "baby" will stand within a ten-foot circle while you amateur marksmen pass over him in one of the Airport's airplanes and try to drop a loaded paper bag close enough to drive him out of the circle. A free airplane ride over the city will reward the one who comes closest, and then it's all great fun and the practice may come in handy. Gopher Squad Downed With Ease,_105-21 Wolverine Trackmen Have Field Day In Downing Weak Minnesota Team Michigan's powerful track team had little more than a brisk workout yes- terday in swamping a weak Minne- sota squad, 105 to 21. The Gophers captured but two first places, in the two-mile and shot put, as Michigan scored slams in six of the fourteen events. While the Gophers failed to offer serious competition in any but the two events which they won, the show- ing of five Wolverines featured the meet. Clayton Brelsford in the mile, Paul Gorman in the half-mile, Walt- er Stone in the two-mile, Moreau Hunt in the hurdles, and Harvey Pat- ton in the quarter-mile all gave fur- ther evidence of their continually improving form. In the mile trelsford. staged the best race of the day as he repeated his victory in the three-quarter-mile at the Alix Benefit Meet Tuesday over Captain Harvey Smith. After trail- ing Smith into the last turn, Brels- ford stepped to the front but lost the lead some strides later as Smith turned-up his pace. Brelsford then let loose with a kick which out-kicked Smith's famous sprint to win by a sizeable margin. His time of 4:25.3 was relatively fast for the poor track. Paul Pinkerton finished third to make it a slam. Gorman Repeats Victory In the half-mile Gorman scored another repeat win as he duplicated his victory Tuesday at 660-yards over Howard Davidson. Also trailing into the last turn, Gorman lengthened his pace to win handily in 1:55.7, as Frank Aikens came in for another Wolver- ine slam. Walter Stone made one of the best bids for a victory in the two-mile run when he sprinted the final 150 yards to finish less than three strides be- hind Wayne Slocum, Minnesota's dis- tance ace. Trailing by fully 25 yards in the last 150, Stone put on a burst which fell just short of catching the Gopher star who faded into a walk as he hit the tape. Slocum was timed in 9:36.8. The showing of Moreau Hunt, al- though bested in boht hurdle events by his sophomore teammate, Bob Os- good, substantiated the prediction after the Alix meet that the junior star had regained the form which he had apparently lost during the late winter and early spring. In the hurdles event he lost the lead and the race to Osgood over the last two hurdles in :15.3 and in the lows ran hurdle for hurdle until the finish when Osgood nosed ahead for the win in :24.5. Patton Wins Quarter Harvey Patton, flying behind Stan Birleson, passed the big sophomore in the stretch to win the quarter in one of the best times of the day, :49.5. Although the five Wolverines stood out in their performances, the entire squad displayed its strength on the wet track and field which cut down times and made jumping a hazard. Besides the mile and half-mile, slams were scored by the Wolverines in the quarter, high jump, discus, and broad jump. The only other Gopher victory be- sides the two-mile was in the shot, which Dominic Krezowski won with a throw of 44 feet, 7/2 inches, with his teammate, Bill Freimuth, second. Sam Stoller, of Michigan, was the high-point winner of the meet as he won both dashes without trouble anc Wolverines Defeated By Illinois, I1-0 Swanson Holds Michigan Team To Four Hits As Larson Allows Six Both Teams Show BrilliantFielding 6,000 Fans See Pitching' Battle; Three Singles In Sixth Produce Lone Run By ARTHUR W. CARSTENS The Illinois baseball.team defeated Michigan at Ferry Field yesterday, 1 to 0, to retain undisputed posses- sion of first place in the Conference race. Hale Swanson, sophomore right-hander, allowed the Wolver- ines only four hits in shutting them out, while Berger Larson, Michigan ace, was nicked for six singles, three of which were bunched in the sixth' to produce the lone run of the game. More than 6,000 fans defied the lead-; eri skies and chill winds to watch the game. Both teams performed brilliantly in the field, showing a brand of ball far above the college standard, but the Indians won on the sensational work of their sophomore hurler and superior offensive strength. Thea Wolverines lost a golden opportun- ity to score in the eighth when they< got runners on first and third, through a fluke, but failed when Re-x geezi hit weakly to third. Break Comes In Sixth The break in an air-tight pitchers battle came in the sixth, when, after fanning Marshall Duffner on a 3-2 ball, Larson walked Captain Ben Lew-1 is. Murray Franklin, next up, singled between third and short, Lewis being held at second. Bud Moyer hit a1 hard ball down first baseline, Russ Oliver going out on the grass to make a beautiful stp, which held the hit to one base and forced Lewis to pull up at third. With the bases loaded and one out, Lewis Swikle, who already had onea hit, came to bat. He singled cleanly into right field, Lewis crossing un- molested with the only run. Larson was still in a bad hole, with the bases loaded, but Hinze, pinch- hitting for Kowalski, hit a short fly to, John Regeczi in right field, and Pitcher Swanson ended the inning with a pop fly to Teitelbaum. Michigan Opportunity In Eighth The Michigan opportunity in the eighth came on the same sort of fluke by which Ohio State beat them in the opener at Columbus. With one out, Rudness singled over third base. Paulson flied to short. With Oliver at bat and two down, Rudness stole second, beating catcher Russel's weak throw. Oliver hit to third-baseman Lewis who started to throw to first but whirled and tagged Rudness as he came into third. Base-Umpire Ernie Vick, however, was watching for the play at first, and didn't see Lewis tag Rudness. Both runners were declared safe. The Indian infield gathered in a threatening, protesting circle around Vick, but he refused to change his decision. With the fans shouting for a run, John Regeczi, who had fanned on two previous trips to the plate, hit a ground ball to Lewis, who tossed him out at first. Larson was obviously trying for the corners on every pitch, refusing to groove the ball no matter how far he was behind a batter. BOX SCORE Pick Winners 0f Women's Scholarships $1,500 Fund Pledged By Detroit Branch Toward Permanent Eliot Award Michigan Alumnae Gifts Total $1,700 Three University Women Receive $500 Graduate Fellowships Winners of the scholarships and1 fellowships for next year offered by the Michigan Alumnae Council, were announced yesterday by Mrs. Sey- mour Beach Conger, secretary of the Alumnae Board, at a luncheon meet- ing of the Detroit branch.r Carla Gilmore, '36, of Grand Rap-p ids, and Dorothy Gies, '36, of AnnL Arbor, were named to hold the Sey-d mour Beach Conger and the Judiths Ginsberg Colten snior gift scholar- ships of $100 each respectively. TheF awards are made, on the basis of scholarship. Recipients of tlie three graduatec fellowships of $500 each were alsoV made public. The G. Carl Huber fel- lowship, awarded to a woman fory medical study, will be held by Anne Kowaliszyn, '38M, Frances Butler, '36-r B.Ad., of Saginaw, was selected to receive the Ida Lewis Malfroid fellow-' ship. Barbara Clarke, of Northamp-s ton, Mass., the only non-Michigans student to win an award, will hold theo Lucy Elliott fellowship. The alter-s nate fellow for this prize is Cath- erine Strateman, of White Plains,d N. Y. All three women have distinguishedt themselves in schplarship and aca-v demic attainment in their respec-a tive fields, according to the Commit-i tee of Awards. Miss Clarke, a grad- uate of Radcliffe College, will receive her M. A. from Smith College in June. She is to study for her doc- torate in the English departmenta here. The Committee of Awards whichs made the decisions includes Deanr Clarence Yoaktmof the GraduateK School, Prof. Louis Bredvold, Deana Alice C. Lloyd, Mrs. Edward Maire, chairman of the Alumnae Council,c and Mrs. Charles Gore, chairman ofs the fellowship committee of thet Council. Prof. A. C. Curtis, secretaryt of the medical school, assisted in the choice of the Huber scholar. Forty applications were received for the awards. The senior gift scholarships havef (Continued on Page 5) Prof. Meritt Given Post At Princeton: Prof. Benjamin D. Meritt, of Johns Hopkins University, one time member I of the University Greek department' was appointed yesterday to the staff of the new School of Humanistic Studies at Princeton University. Professor Meritt came here in 1928. In 1931 he obtained a leave of ab- sence in order to visit Greece. When he returned to the United States, he joined the Greek department at Johns Hopkins. He taught there until this week when he accepted the Prince- ton appointment. Professor Meritt obtained his Ph.D. degree from Princeton in 1924. Along with Professor Meritt, Prof. Erwin Panofsky, formerly of the Uni- versity of Hamburg, in the United States as visiting professor at New York University and lecturer at Princeton, was also appointed to the staff of the new school. The School of Humanistic Studies, which was established last week, is the third unit of the Institute for Advanced Study at Princeton. Work will begin in the Humanistic Studies division in the fall, Princeton trustees said. III 'arleyIs Pervaded B yd y Sense Of Foreboding As Sessions Are Continued Personality Is Theme Of Talk By Henderson Extension Division Head Addresses Final Session Of Student Press Group Defining personality as "the dual relation between two people," Prof. William D. Henderson, director of the University Extension Division, yester- day addressed the final general ses- sion of the Michigan Interscholastic Press Association on "The Power of Personality." "Personality is not character," Pro- fessor Henderson explained. "Your character is what you are, while your personality is the reaction between you and some other individual. In that sense there are just as many personalities as there are persons to react." He then pointed out that an indi- vidual may have more than one per- sonality, taking as an example the so-called "professional personalities" of the doctor, the lawyer, and the school teacher. In discussing the power of the in- dividual personality, he set up a circle to represent the sum total, divided in- to four quadrants of strength and weakness, and ' agreeable and dis- agreeable elements of the personal- ity. Speaker Uses Illustration "Let us suppose that your strong points counted eight and your agree- able ones six," Professor Henderson continued. "The power of your per- sonality then is not the sum, but rather the resultant of the two. Your personality must be agreeable as well as strong. As elements of strength he dis- cussed the physical aspect and poise, stating that while the physical set- up is for the most part an inherited trait, poise is partly an inherent trait and partly "a sense of familiarity with the environment." For elements that go to make up an agreeable personality he chose three in particular. These he de- fined as "the clothes you wear and the way you wear them, the way you walk and the way you talk, and finally mannerisms and manners." On the subject of self-expression, he paused to praise the English lan- guage and recommend to the high school journalists the acquisition of as large a vocabulary as possible. "English Is Fluent" "The English language is one of the most fluent languages in the world because it is uninflected and because it has the largest vocabulary in the world," he claimed. "It has al- most 400,000 words as compared with 350,000 in German, its nearest com- petitor. In addition it is the greatest borrowing language on earth, and when it can't borrow a word any- where, it borrows portions of it from different languages, or makes one up. Dr. Henderson characterized Italian as the language of music and French as the language of fine shades of expression. "But English," he said, "is the commercial language, and is likely some day to become the uni- versal language." He closed his speech with a dis- cussion of manners and urged his au- dience for a strict observance of them. "Manners 'are artificial rules that were invented for the protection of society," he ' said in his definition. BULLETIN One person was killed and two others were seriously injured shortly before midnight when the roadster in which they were rid- ing failed to make the turn on the Whitmore road near the Catholic Church and overturned in a ditch. C Neil Elsifor, 17 years old, of - Pontiac street, was killed instant- ly. It is believed by officials at the Washtenaw county sheriff's office 'that Elsifor was driving the car at the time of the accident. Ralph Fletcher, 17 years old, of F 1128 Pontiac street, is in the Uni- a versity Hospital in a serious con- i dition. According to attendants s of the hospital, Fletcher has very e little chance of recovery. C Elton Karr, 18 years old, 1004 a Broadway street, was unconscious when admitted to St. Joseph's a Hospital, and is believed to be in s a serious condition also. c b George Darker, 61 years old, of r 3801 Outer Drive, MIvindale, last a night committed suicide by inhal- c ing carbon monoxide fumes after t driving from his home to a cot- tage at Pleasant Lake, in Freedom s Township.F His body was found at about 11F last night in his car by deputy I Sheriff Manny Sodt, who was li called by Darker's fhmily, wor- ried because he had not returned. t Financial difficulties were given as the reason for Darker's action. n No inquest was ordered. b t w League Entry a Advocated By Prof. Pollock r Benefits Of International y Union Urged At Clothing t Model Assembly Session i Advocating that the United Statesa join the League of Nations, Prof. t James K. Pollock of the political science department closed the two-I ay session of the Model Assembly 1 )f the League of Nations here with an address to the delegates of the In-e ternational clubs at a luncheon in the Union. Professor Pollock cited the neces-e aty ofthe League, and declared that 'although it is weak at times, it is generally effective and useful. e "If we did not have the present League, we would have another one,"I he said. "It is necessary to have somet union between nations today." Professor Pollock warned against "expecting all the nations to develop into universal society over night,"I and denied emphatically charges of the League's ineffectiveness.I Closing the last meeting of thei Model Assembly, Martin Wagner,t Grad., Rhodes Scholar, as presidentI of the Assembly, addressed the dele-l gates ygsterday morning in the First< Congregational Church. He poin.ted out that the goal of Model Assemblies is to make students realize that the League is no "pana- cea" for all international ills, but that its strength will depend on the sin- cerity and activity of its members. Those who are really interested in promoting international harmony and understanding, he said, will have to face much suffering and individual hardship. At the business session which fol- lowed the International Club's lunch- eon, plans were made for the ninth annual meeting of the Model Assem- bly, which will be held at another Michigan College. The committee which had charge of this year's Assembly were Philip Van Zile, '36, secretary-general; Genevieve Wilkoski, '35Ed., and Ann Timmons, '36, deputy secretary-gen- erals; Doris Buell, Grad., under-sec- retary-general; Morten Adinoff, '37, president of the Council; Margaret Hiscock, '36, director of political sec- tion; Marie Murphy, '35, director of information; William Favel, '35Ed., John Perkins, '36, Leonard Gernant, Grad., directors of sections; Nina Jane Knutson, '36, treasurer, and Yvonne Oddon, interpreter, War, Collapse Of Existing System Called Inevitable At EveningMeeting ?erplexing Queries Hurled At Faculty parr Blames Blindness Of Forefathers; Says It Is Too Late To Act Now By ARTHUR M. TAUB Two hundred students at the Spring 'arley were left "hanging on a limb" s a tone of pessimism and forebod- nig of complete social breakdown was truck by faculty and student speak rs as the second day of the Parley ame to a close at 11 p.m. yesterday tt the Union. The evening session of the Parley, ttended by a small minority of con- ervatives, a greater number of radi- als, and a large majority of those in etween, was the scene of this virtual enunciation of the belief that any ction could stave off war and almost. ertain collapse of the existing sys- em. "What alternatives are open to the tudent between Communism and ascism? How can we stave off ascism in this country? What so- utions to these questions can the aculty offer?" These were a few of he questions hurled from the floor. After a series of answers in which nost of the questions were evaded y the faculty and misunderstood by he students and the whole question vas placed before Prof. Lowell Carr f the sociology department. He was sked by Martin Wagner, Grad.; Abe awerdling ,'35; and Robert E. Ack- rberg: "What is the misfit, the de- uded liber~a,..going to .do when he ets out of School? What alterna- ives are there between reaction and 'evolution?" Professor Carr replied, "I can bring you no cheer. You must buck up and ake it on the chin. "The only solution I have to offer s more intelligence," he continued, saying that as inadequate as that answer might be to the audience, that it was the best he could offer. "What you students want is action. I know that," he said. "But it is too ate for action on our part." He then outlined the social and economic background of the United States, declaring that it lay in the hands of men who lived in past gen- erations "to change what is now our fate. "We have been blind in allowing economic power, control of the or- gans of communciation - the news- papers and the' radio - to fall into the wrong hands," Professo Carr asserted. He further stated that "only our forefathers could have pre- vented this," and that "I don't know how we can get back this power." Even by a process of slow change, he declared, it will be a long time until economic power and control of the means of communication can be placed in safer and more intelligent hands. "Our fathers should have acted. We will pay for it. "Meanwhile, war and perhaps rev- (Continued on Page 5) Roosevelt Fight With C. Of C Divides Capital President Roosevelt's dispute with the Chamber of Commerce of the United States today brought reper- cussion from backers of both sides of that controversy, while left-wingers met in closed session to figure a third- party movement in 1936. The chief executive's tilt with the Chamber assumed the guise of a 1936 campaign issue when Rep. Snell of New York, the House Republican leader, challenged his assertion that the Chamber's criticism of New Deal policies did not represent the thought of business men generally. Snell, chairman of the G.O.P. con- vention in 1932, said the President's statement was "absolutely unfair" in claiming that the membership of the Chamber did not represent the atti- tude of business men. . , Michigan Ford, 3b ...... Rudness, cf Paulson, 2b ... Oliver, lb .... Regeczi, if .... Teitelbaum, ss AB R ..4 0 ..3 0 ..3 0 ..4 0 ..4 0 ..4 0 Huy *Lerl Will Lars iger, rf1......2 'ner, rf.......1 iams, c.......4 on, p ........4 Totals.... ..33 0 0 0 0 0 H 1 2 0 0: 0 0 0 0 1 0 IQ 0 0 1 2 2 0 0 0 0 6 Q 0 2 4 11 3 2 1 0 4 0 27 0 3 0 16 1 1. 0 2 3 1 0 0 27 A 2 0 2 0 0 3 0 0 4 2 13 E 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 t Peak Of Student Joy Reached Saturday Night, Survey Shows Illinois AB R Reinhart, if .....5 0 Henry, rf........3 0 Duffner, lb ........3 0 Lewis, 3b .........3 1 Franklin, 2b ......4 0 Moyer, cf .........4 0 Swikle, ss ....." ..4 0 Kowalski, c ......2 0 Russell, c ........1 0 Swanson, p ........3 0 **Hinze ..........1 0 Totals ......33 1 A] 0 0 { 0t 4 3 0 2 3 0 { 0 17 E 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 By SHELDON M. ELLIS The happiness scale of University students zooms to a weekly apex each Saturday night and then plunges precipitously to the lowest depths; at noon on Monday according to a+ survey made by students in Prof. Lowell J. Carr's course in social psy- chology. One hundred and thirty-eight un- dergraduates were questioned in the survey designed to discover the fac- tors determining happiness and un- happiness among students at the Uni- versity. Of those answering the sur- The greatest cause of unhappiness, the survey reveals, is poor grades., Seventy students felt that they were hurting and disappointing someone at home because of poor grades. An- other factor advanced by 50 students, was that poor grades made them feel inferior. Of the causes for poor grades, 84 attributed them to care- lessness, 58 to lack of time, and 28 to lack of ability. Another important factor in de- termining the happiness of the col- lege student is the kind and number of dates which are had, the ques- *Lerner Batted for Heyliger in 6th. **Hinze batted for Kowalski in 7th.