Thne Weather Light rain or snow flurries, much colder Thursday; Friday generally fair. Y 3k igrt 9an iIait~ Editorials A Local Opportunity ... A Course In Flying ... VOL XLVI. No. 10 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1935 PRICE FIVE CENTS Death Verdict For BrunoHauptmann Upheld In Appeal Prisoner Displays Despair As Prospect Of Execution Looms Evidence Is Found Irrefutable Proof Final Appeal To Supreme Court Is Expected As Next Development TRENTON, N. J., Oct. 9. - ()- The death sentence, imposed on Bruno Richard Hauptmann for the kidnap-murder of Charles A. Lind- bergh Jr., was unanimously upheld today by the Court of Errors and Ap- peals, leaving him only three very doubtful avenues of escape from the electric chair. Supreme Court Justice Thomas W. Trenchard will fix a new execution date for Hauptmann and, unless his lawyers successfully pursue one of the three courses open, the stoical German carpenter will pay the pen- alty decreed at Flemington by a jury of eight men and four women. -Por the first time since he was ar- rested in the Bronx on Sept. 19, 1934, Hauptmann today manifested any- thing approximating despair. His present chief of counsel, C. Lloyd Fisher, broke the news to him in the death house., "I never did this and surely they will find that out before it is too late," Hauptmann told Fisher. His first words, though indicated a regard for his wife Anna's feelings. "My God, what a fine anniversary present for Anna," he exclaimed. The Hauptmanns will have been married 10 years tomorrow. To Be Appealed Late today, Egbert Rosecrans, de- fense' Co'ti Yie;stI the asc- poably, would be appealed to the Supreme Court. "I don't believe we have grounds now for a new trial" The Court- of Pardons, the third avenue of possible escape, can com- mute a sentence to life imprison- ment, but does so rarely. Rosecrans said that he would con- fer this week with Fisher and Fred- erick A. Pope, the third defense at- torney. Sixteen members of the full Court were on thebench when the decision was announced, but only 13 voted. Justice Trenchard, as trial judge, was automatically barred from the delib- erations, and two new lay judges were appointed after the appeal on June 20. The opinion was written by sev- enty-three-year-old Supreme Court Justice Charles W. Parker. - It was nearly 14,000 words in extent and was preceded by a syllabus, noting briefly the 16 points raised by the defense. Verdict Upheld "Our conclusion," the opinion read, "is that theverdict is not only not contrary to the weight of the evi- dence. but one to which the evidence inescapably led. "From three different and in the main, unrelated sources, the proofs point unerringly to guilt, viz: "A. Possession and use of the ran- som money; B. The handwriting of the ransom notes; and C. The wood used in the construction of the lad- der." Speaking of the $14,600 ransom money, the court said: "The explanation of the source of this money offered by defendant was incredible and we find not the slight- est evidence to corroborate it. The defendant's handling of the money makes clear his guilty connection with the enterprise." Hutchins Discounts 'Red' Student Scare DES MOINES, Oct. 9.-(UP)-Dr. Robert Maynard Hutchins, president of the University of Chicago, never has met a "red" professor, he said here tonight, and he doesn't believe "more and more students are get- ting more and more red." The educator told delegates of the national association of mutual insur- ance companies that the "way to make students red is to suppress hem_ " Campus Sale Of First Gargoyle Starts Today Tie first issue of the Gargoyle will go on sale today. Copies of the humor magazine may be bought from student vendors on the campus and from newstands and at the Publications Building on Maynard Street. The price of single copies is ten cents, but, according to Norman Williamson, '36, business manager of the Gargoyle, a saving of forty cents can be had by taking ad- vantage of the offer of nine issues for fifty cents. Sociologists To Convene Here October 16-19 Professors Wood, Carr, To Address Meetings; 1,000 Expected More than 1,000 Michigan sociolo- gists and social workers will come to Ann Arbor next Wednesday for the annual Michigan Conference of So- cial Work, Oct. 16-19. The Conference will last through Saturday, meetings being held in the Union. One of the principal speakers to address the conference will be San- ford Bates of Washington, D. C., head of the Federal bureau of prisons. Other outstanding speakers on the prorgam include J. C. Armstrong, Michigan commissioner of pardons and paroles; Dr. Wililam Haber, State ERA administrator; Harry L. Pierson, StaterWPA administrator; and Dr. Robert H. Haskell, superintendent of theN Wyne Cowun Tining -Sehookl at Northville. Members of the University faculty who are on the program are Prof. Arthur E. Wood and Prof. Lowell J. Carr, both of the sociology depart- ment. The Conference will open with reg- istration Wednesday morning on the second floor of the Union. Miss Har- riet Johnson, president of the Con- ference and a sister of former-Gov- ernor William A. Comstcok, will pre- side at a luncheon at 12:15 p.m., when Robert W. Kelso, director of the University's Institute of Health and Social Sciences, will speak on "Plan- ningathe Community's Social Work (with special reference to the small- er city)." Subscriptions To' 'Contemporary' To Be Solicited A program of stories and articles more intimately associated with the campus will augment this year's edi- tion of "Contemporary," Michigan literary magazine, according to an announcement by the editors last night. Beginning a three-day campaign to secure 350 or more subscriptions to the magazine, the business staff will have stands available in Angell Hall, in University Hall, and in the center of the diagonal for the convenience of subscribers. Four issues are planned for this year, as for last, and the special sub- scription rate is 75 cents. Marking the second year of con- secutive publication, the "Contempo- rary" is receiving the active support of the English department, which uses the magazine for occasional-reci- tations. Contributions of poetry, essays, drama or fiction are solicited, and may be sent to the "Contemporary" offices in the Student Publications Building. Rites For Wilgus To Be Held Today Funeral rites for Professor-Emer- itus Horace L. Wilgus, who died sud- denly of a heart attack Tuesday afternoon, will be held at 3 p.m. to- morrow at the residcnce 1547 Wash- Silent Period For Rushees StartsToday Fraternities And Would-Be Pledges Must Refrain From All Contacts Registration To Close October 11 Cooperation Is Asked By Interfraternity Council In Pledging Process A four-day period of silence during which both fraternities and rushees will submit their preference lists to the office of the Dean of Students, Room 2, University Hall, will begin at 8:30 p.m. today as fraternity rushing activities for the first semes- ter of this year draw to a close. In c o m p li a n c e with Interfraternity Council regulations there should be no contact whatsoever between rush- ees and fraternity men during this period. Two final opportunities for rushees to register, an absolute requirement of the council rules before one may be pledged, remain. The council offices, Room 306, the Union, will be open for registration from 3 p.m. until 5 p.m. today and from 10 a.m. until noon tomorrow. Rushees neglecting to register will be ruled ineligible until next semester. George R. Williams, president of the council, urges fraternities to re- mind freshmen of the registration requirement at all rushing dates to- day. Each freshman desiring to pledge a fraternity should exchange the re- ceipt he received upon paying his registration fee for a blank prefer- ence list between 8 a.m. and noon tomorrow in the office of the Dean of Students. After designating the fraternities he considers desirous in order of preference on this list, he must return it to the same office be-' tween noon and 5 p.m. tomorrow. Each fraternity will present to the Dean of Students before 9 a.m. to- non l a t llt "f the rushees it is willing to pledge, stipulating the num- ber it desires, and the address of each. The office of the Dean of Students will honor these bids and accept- ances according to the respective or- ders of preference, awarding each fraternity as near, but not more' than, the number of pledges it de- sires. Both the fraternity and the rushee will be notified Monday of the agree-1 ments made and rushees shall re- port to their respective houses at 6 p.m. that day to be pledged. Violations of rushing rules in the' past have been principally during the silence periods, Williams remind- ed the fraternities, and adherence to all rules during this period will be strictly maintained within the power of the council. PROF. MAURER RETURNS Prof. Wesley H. Maurer of the jour- nalism department has returned from the convention of the health educa- tion institute of the American Public Health Association recently held in Milwaukee, Wis. He addressed the convention on "Enlisting Community Organizations in a Public Health Program" and "Social Engineering in Public Health." ........_. t Murderer Of Daughters Is Apprehended Ferrin Rowland, Hunted By Police For 10 Days Caught In St. Louis - Admits Drowning Of Step-Daughters Letter Sent To His Wife Is Principal Clue In Final Capture_ FLINT, Mich., Oct. 9.- (A) - Deputy Sheriff Arnold and Floyd Harder of Pontiac re- covered the bodies of Katherin Wooden, 6, and her two year old sister, Virginia, from the middle of Bloat Lake, south of here tonight ,where officers had gone to drag for them af- ter the step-father of the chil- dren, Ferrin Rowland, had confessed at St. Louis, Mo., that he had drowned them. ST. LOUIS, Oct. 9. - Ferrin Row- land, of Harrison, Mich., admitted Wednesday afternoon that he had drowned his two small step-daughters in a small Michigan lake three weeks ago, St. Louis detectives announced. Rowland, hunted since Oct. 3 after the disappearance of the girls on Sept. 17, was arrested in the Rector Hotel earlier today. The capture fol- lowed interception of letters from Rowland to his wife and a friend in Harrison. The girls were Katherin Goodin, 6 years old, and her sister Virgina, 2. Rowland said he had fastened part of a broken plowshare to the chil- dren's necks after placing them in a rowboat on Slack's lake, which is near the road between Flint and Holly, three miles south of Grand Blanc. When he threw them overboard, Row- land told detectives, they made no outcry. Rowland then rowed back to shore and drove his truck back to Flint, he1 said. Officers said that as they entered' Rowland's hotel room he attempted to end his life, pulling a revolver1 from under his shirt. They prevented him from firing and he was taken to the detective bureau for question- ing. Michigan officers who came to St. Louis to make the arrest with local police were Sheriff George Bates, Deputy James Clute and Prosecutor Theodore G. Bowler, of Clare County, and Deputy Michael Kelley, of Gen- esee county. The prisoner's statement that he had killed the children because he "wanted to be rid of them" coincided with an assertion he made in the letter which led to his arrest. A previous letter had sent the Michigan officers to this city last night, but they carefully concealed their destination, pretending that; they were bound for northern Mich- igan to search the area in which Rowland often had gone hunting. John Graham, neighbor of Row- land's, Wednesday received a letter, which asked him to deliver an in- closed message to Mrs. Rowland, who has been held in the Clare County jail since his disappearance. Austria, Hungary, RiseTo Defense Of Italian Policy; Ii Duce s Armies Advance n Italy Will Not Pause In Her Aggressive Attitude; Many March Forward 10,000 Sick Are Sent Back To Italy Italian Forces In South Are Reported Suffering From Thirst Italy has no intention of resting on its oars after conquering a fertile strip of northern Ethiopia, officials asserted Wednesday at Rome. "Aduwa is only the first step," they said. "The Army for the moment is quiet along the entire fron, but is preparing for another advance." But despite the "quiet," Italian correspondents at Asmara, Eritrea, confirmed reports that Il Duce's ad- vancing soldiers had stormed , and captured Edagahamus after "most bloody fighting." (This was denied by Ethiopia.) Edagahamus lies southeast of Ad- igrat, taken several days ago, in northern Ethiopia. "Hordes of Ethiopians came into a frontal clash with the advancing Italians and were mowed down by modern Italian weapons," said the dispatches. In a counter-attack Ethiopia's warriors suffered "very grave" losses, it was said. Edgahamus is important because1 it gives the Italians access to a car-j avan trail to Hauzien, a key town in the area. Many Italians Sick4 Thousands of sick Italian soldiers, victims of fever and dysentery, are being returned to Italy from the East African war zone, semi-official Paris quarters said Wednesday.1 French agents have reported the" passage through the Suez Canal of 10,000 stricken troops. Unconfirmed1 reports were prevalent in Paris that Italy has lost 12,000 men-in battle and from sickness. Reports from Djibouti, French Somaliland, said that Ethiopians are1 salting wells and underground springs as the Italians advance from the Mt. Mussa Ali sector of the Eastern Front,1 and that the Italians already are suf-) fering from thirst. While the Edagahamus action went on, another strong detachmeht of, troops advanced from Aduwa toward Aksum, Ethiopia's holy city and former capital. Italians Build Roads The killing of 20 Ethiopians was re- ported in another dispatch which. said Italian workmen building roads near the Eritrean harbor were at- tacked by natives but drove them off. Meanwhile, Addis Ababa, lacking news of actual fighting from any sec- tor, talked feverishly of the exploits of daring guerilla bands on the Ad- uwa-Aksum frontier. Reports to Reuter's (British) cor- respondents in Addis Ababa said that Ethiopian losses in the North were small. Ras Seyoum, the Northern commander, was described as in ur- gent need of rifles and amunition, al- though it was reported that uniden- tified Americans had presented the Emperor with two airplanes which are to be shipped soon from New York. Two May Be Called By Discipline Body Faculty members of the University Disciplinary C o m m itt e e denied knowledge late last night of rumors that two students will be called be- fore them at their meeting at 11 a.m. today in Hutchins Hall. The students are believed to have violated a rule which forbids passing out handbill advertising on the cam- pus. Prof. E. Blythe Stason, chairman of the committee, declared that it is just a regular meeting and denied knowl- edge that two students will be called in for violation of the rule. Other members of the committee could not be reached, but the rumor persisted from reliable sources. Professor Trampled Underfoot In Rush For Front Benches Psychologists had new phenomena to ponder over yesterday when a cam- pus psychology professor found him- self under a deluge of requests for front seats. Explanations were not lacking. In fact, the explanations constituted an- other phenomenon. "My room-mate's name begins with an 'A'" began one eloquent plea for a front seat, "and we do all our studying together. 1 would please like a place next to her." "My glasses are broken," said another, "and IJ won't be able to have them fixed for a while." "I really can't pay such1 good attention in the back of the room," was another's excuse." "Rationalizations!" pooh - poohed the professor. 300,000 Menj Fighting Along Eritrean Front1 Ethiopian Army Repulsedf In Attack Upon Aduwat Tuesday Night; PARIS, Oct. 9. - (3)-Dispatches to the Paris Soir from the Eritrean front stated today that fighting is1 general throughout the northern Ethiopian sector with 300,000 troops engaged in a quadrangle formed by1 Adi Ugri and Adi Kaie, in Eritrea and Adigrat and Aksum, in Ethi- opia. The fiercest fighting, said the dis- patches, was on the outskirts of Ak- sum, which was reported encircled by Italian columns but not yet cap-r tured due to the heavy fire of Ethi- opion sharpshooters hidden in the1 hills commanding the city.t The dispatches also said an Ethi- opian plan to cut the Eritrean rail-f road at Massaua collapsed when at- tacks at Adi Ugri and Adi Kaie were repulsed._ What was described as a third at- tack on Adigrat, which is in Italian1 hands, was said to have failed. Last night, Paris-Soir's report said, Ethiopians attempted to recapture Aduwa and were thrown back after three attacks, the battle lasting until down with heavy Ethiopian losses.t Large numbers of Italian wounded,; the dispatches said, were being moved1 to the rear. Kappa Tau Alpha ' Holds First Meeting The first official meeting of Kappa Tau Alpha, national honorary jour- nalistic fraternity, was held last night1 in Prof. John L. Brumm's office. The' new officers elected at the meeting3 are Irving F. Levitt, '36, president, Jerome C. Patterson, '36, vice-presi- dent; and William C. Bergman, '36, secretary-treasurer. As a part of its program for the coming year, the society decided to sponsor a journalistic circulating li- brary to be housed in the journalism department, and to be placed at the disposal of the students in journal- ism. This library is to consist of cur- rent books dealing with present day issues vital to modern journalism. Presentation of a number of book reviews conducted by the faculty of the journalism department will also be sponsored by the fraternity. The reviews will be open to students gen- erally. As a means of recounting the ex- periences of former members who have entered the journalistic field since graduation, a meeting of the alumni of the fraternity was also planned. Plan For Second Band Is Announced Prof. William D. Revelli, director of University Bands, yesterday an- nounced the formation of a second Refusal Of Two Countries To Back League Deals Blow To Sanctions Assembly Adjourns Without Discussion Observers Expect Large Majority To Vote Use Of Restrictions GENEVA, Oct. 9. - (P) - The League of Nations alignment favor- ing the punishment of Italy for in- vading Ethiopia was broken today by Austria and Hungary. Baron Pflugl, of Austria, announced that his nation does not accept the report of the Council Committee of Six under which sanctions would be imposed against Italy. The delegate from Hungary an- nounced that his country was not in a position to indorse the conclusions of the League Council which decided that Italy had disregarded its cove- nants under the League of Nations. These two announcements were made in a meeting of the League Assembly which was suddenly ad- journed without definite action. League observers, however, expect- ed an overwhelming majority of the 56 Assembly members to rally to the cause of sanctions at a critical session tomorrow. Aloisi To Speak The first speaker will be Baron Pompeo Aloisi, head of the Italian delegation. He is expected to de- nounce strongly the action of the League Council in indicting Italy as an agressor against Ethiopia and a violator of the Covenant. Any other opponents of the Coun- cil's indictment will then be called upon to speak, along with those who wish to make reservations for their respective governments. Shortly after today's meeting of the Assembly, which had been called into. urgent session, opened Baron Emeric Pflugl, of Austria, announced to the tense delegates: "Austria cannot forget that in a fateful moment of her history Italy contributed to safeguard her integ- rity. The links that bind the Aus- trian people to the people of Italy are strong. Austria will not fail in a friendship that is destined to last through time to come." He referred to the Nazi putsch of July, 1934, in the course of which Chancellor Engelbert Dollfuss was as- sassinated. Italy's army was moved to the frontier, ready to march into Austria, should Nazi Germany at- tempt to take over the Vienna govern- ment. Hungary Refuses Hungary took a similar position. Said Laszlo Develics, her delegate: "Hungary hears with grief of meas- ures about to be applied against Italy that so frequently and effectively has shown its friendship toward Hun- gary." Although the refusal of these na- tions to join in sanctions would be a vital aid to Italy, the majority of League members are expected to go ahead with their plan of .exerting economic and financial pressure upon Mussolini's country. A unanimous vote of the assembly is not required. Any nation which refuses to approve the Council's in- dictment of Italy, however, is not compelled to join in application of sanctions. 7 YearmOld Boy Not Poisoned, Reports Show The report on the examination of the body of Richard Streicher, Jr., seven-year-old Ypsilanti boy slain last March, discloses that the boy was neither poisoned nor were bones in his body broken, Prosecutor Albert J. Rapp, said last night. The prosecutor's statement fol- lowed receipt by him of the report of Dr. John C. Bugher, University path- ologist. who nerformed an ntonnv New German Professor Gives Picture Of European Colleges, By PAUL D. JACOBS A veritable paradise of unlimited cuts, appeared in the description of European universities offered by Prof. Ernest A. Phillipson, who was newly appointed to the German depart- ment. "Each student is allowed the privilege of making his own choice of subjects, and professors are paid not by the university, but by the stu- dents in their own classes," said Pro- fessor Phillipson. European higher education em- phasizes the humanistic arts rather than the sciences according to Pro- fessor Phillipson. However the pri- mary difference in higher education, as it exists in the United States and in Europe, is one of purpose, he con- tinued, and the European university stresses research work, and teaching methods are seldom used; whereas the American university is largely de- voted to education and the teaching of facts, rather than to the searching for knowledge hv actual nerformance our United States of America. The reason he offers for this is, that "in- ternational conflagrations in Europe are due rather to traditional nation- alisms and long time grudges, than to economic forces." Although connected with European universities for over seventeen years, Professor Phillipson feels utterly in accord with the fundamental ideals of American freedom. However, in answer to those who flaunt a "dic- tatorship" bugaboo in front of all who advocate a reasonable amount of reg- imentation and cooperative action in periods of stress, he states, "All ideals of freedom, in order to maintain themselves intact, should permit a certain degre of regimentation and curtailment of personal liberties in times of emergency. Those who ad- vocate complete freedom of the in- dividual should realize that what they are advocating is not American- ism, but rather anarchism." Professor Phillinson received his