'the weather Partly morrow; today cloudy today and to- rising temperature t4r lflir ig9an PUIIAsll- 4 l EditoriAs Buy ,A Galens Tag ... Rebirth Of The Theater... VOL. XLVI. No. 55 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1935 PRICE FIVE CENTS Michigan Is Victor In Opener Conquers Calvin College 42 To 27 As Basketball Season Begins Townsends Lead Wolverine Attack Capt. Tomagno Stars At Defense In Stubbornly Fought Game GRAND RAPIDS, Dec. 2. - (P) - University of Michigan's veteran bas- ketball team opened its 1935-36 sea- son here tonight with an impressive 42-27 victory over Calvin College. The Wolverines displayed a smooth- working machine and never once were seriously tnreatened by the Calvin quintet, which nevertheless fought stubbornly throughout the game. At half time, Michigan led Calvin 22-15. Earl and John Townsend, Mich- igan's sophomore forwards, led the University's attack and figured in many brilliant plays. Earl Townsend scored 14 of Michigan's points. Cap- tain Chelso Tomagno, guard, played an outstanding defensive game, foil- ing many Calvin rushes. Don Green, Calvin forward, was the most outstanding man on the home team, sinking five field goals during the opening period. He also figured in the stubborn Calvin de- fense. The Wolverines started to pull away in the early part of the second half when Earl Townsend scored from the field and 6 foot 9 inch John Gee began to locate the hoop from the tip-in region. Gee counted three field goals in the second half after being held scoreless in the first. Green was completely bottled up in the closing perid,. being held to one field goal as the Wolverines changed defense men. As the game neared its close, Coach Franklyn Cappon gave three of his sophomores a chance. Coach A. H. Muyskens of Calvin, former coach at Holland Christian High, also sub- stituted freely throughout. A crowd of 2,500 persons saw the game: Wheels Of Justice Revolve Dizzily In Complex Set-Up Strange and devious are the turns made by the wheels of justice. Prosecutor Albert J. Rapp, in bringing charges of larceny against Clinton LeForge, Ypsilanti attorney, became intricately involved in those wheels last week. When Judge D. Z. Curtiss of Ypsi- lanti died some years ago, he willed his estate to his adopted daughter, Kate Keller, and Mr. Rapp became administrator. Miss Keller was in- volved and ultimately convicted in the "Torch Murder" case, and in order to prosecute her, Rapp relin- quished his administratorship to Le- Forge. LeForge ultimately gave up his ad- ministratorship to William Knight of Ypsilanti. Last week Knight accused LeForge of fraud in his handling of the estate, and Mr. Rapp is prosecut- ing the case. Mr. Rapp also had occasion to question LeForge when he was impli- cated in the Streicher murder case last spring. All of which is very confusing. J. H. Breasted Succumbs To Blood Infection 72-Year-Old Egyptologist Seventh To Die After Exposure To 'Curse' NEW YORK, Dec. 2. - () -- Dr. James H. Breasted, famed Egyptol- ogist who exposed himself to the so- called "curse"~ upon violators of a pharaoh's tomb, died today of a blood infection. He was taken off the liner Conte di Savoia last Thursday and speeded to Presbyterian Hospital suffering, a ship's doctor said, from a recurring attack of malarial fever. - Hospital officials said the seventy- year-old archaeologist succumbed to a "hemolytic streptococcic infection." Ie had derided several times the force of a curse found by him and 21 other scientific diggers in the tomb of King Tut-Ank-Hamen. Inscribed on the walls of the crypt were these words. "Death shall come on swift wings to him that toucheth the tomb of the Pharaoh." Seven Of 22 Are Dead Of the 22 who first looked on the inscription after the tomb's seal was broken in 1922, seven have died. The Earl of Carnarvon, who spon- sored the work that led to discovery of the crypt, was the first to die, early in 1923, and the "curse" superstition was blamed by some. Others who followed in death were EVr William Garstin, Sir Charles Cust, Arthur E. P. B. Weigall, Prince. Ali Fahmy Bey, Arthur H. Mace, as- sistant curator of the Metropolitan Museum, and Prof. Breasted. As before, scientists joined today to scoff at hints of the superna- tural in Dr. Breasted's death. The proportion of the exploring party that has died, in the opinion of Egyptologists, has been no greater than the normaldeath rate among average human beings. Dr. Breasted scoffed at the warn- ing words on Tut-Ank-Hamen's tomb and made the royal burial place his home while he dug up evidence of the reality of Helen of Troy, traced the life of human conscience back to 3,000 B. C., and found that surgery was practiced 4,000 years ago and that transplanting of glands was 3,000 years old. His Life-Long Work His work along the Nile was but a phase of a lifelong study that un- earthed Oriental secrets hidden for centuries. The battlefield of Armageddon, palace and grounds of Alexander the Great, temples of King Sargon, of Assyria and public works projects built by King Sennacherib in 705 B. C. were a few of the historic sites uncovered under his guidance. Expeditions that went out from his Oriental Institute of the Univer- sity of Chicago to Egypt, Palestine, Syria, Assyria, Babylonia and Persia made him recognized as the leader of this field in the United States and one of the world's foremost authorities on ancient civilizations. Committee Heads Are Announced For J-Hop C ,rrnav, mnff-tn nrn. ic. nnn-.rn Galens Drive Will Start On Campus Today Tag Selling Program For Workshop Maintenance Is To Last Two Days Christmas Party Is Included In Plans Medical Society Will Soon Add Library For Benefit Of CrippledChildren Today and tomorrow members of Galens, honorary society for junior and senior medical students, will be stationed about the campus and downtown selling tags to raise funds for the support of the Galens work- shop and the annual Christmas party given the crippled children in the University Hospital. "It costs us $1,000 a year to keep our workshop going," declared John B. Wood, '36M, in charge of the drive, "and in the future we will need more than that amount since we are adding a library for the chil- dren." Out of the money to be raised today and tomorrow, the society has al- ready made plans for the Christmas party to be given the children, which will include a huge dinner and dis- tribution of toys and candy. Galens are at the present consid- ering offering a scholarship to some boy in- the hospital who has shown particularly good work in manual training in the workshop. "The pos- sibility of this becoming a reality depends on the response we get in our drive today and tomorrow," stat- ed Wood, "sice this adds to our burden." As has been done in the past, members of fraternities and sororities on the campus will be given the op- portunity to contribute collectively. In the workshop on the ninth floor of the University Hospital the hos- pitalized children are taught manual training under the supervision of a licensed and experienced instructor. There the children construct their own toys and games, which are kept for their own pleasure and also for the children who are so seriously ill they cannot take advantage of the opportunities of the workshop. The shop is maintained through- out the year and is open to the children six days a week. Last year 646 inmates of the hospital attended it. "One can scarcely imagine a more w Jrthwhile project - thain the one v, hich Galens society has adopted," said President Alexander G. Ruth- ven yesterday. "I feel sure that stu- dents as well as the faculty will make the special effort necessary this year to accord the support which it has been given in the past." Tribe Plans Dinner For New Members William R. Dixon, '36, and Frank A. Denison, Jr., '36E, were formally initiated into Michigamua, senior honorary society, Sunday night. The two new braves will be hon- ored at a dinner to be held at 6 p.m. Wednesday at the Alpha Delta Phi fraternity. All alumni members and honorary members have been invited to be present at this ceremony. Dixon is the president of the Men's Council, a former student official of the Union, and a member of Sphinx. Denison is active in various activities of the engineering college, including Tau Beta Pi, of which he is the pres- ident. Kreisler To Give Concert Here Tonight Makes Ninth Appearance Locally At 8:15 P. M. In Hill Auditorium Program To Include Own Compositions Wrote Series Believed For Thirty Years To Be By Old Masters The fourth concert of the 1935-36 Choral Union series, featuring Fritz Kreisler, world-famous violinist, will be given at 8:15 p.m. today in Hill Auditorium. Mr. Kreisler will be making his ninth appearance before a local audience in the past 35 years. Kreisler, in addition to being one of the most noted violinists in the world, is also a composer of note and will play a number of his own composi- tion in tonight's concert. One of his most famous series of compositions is that which he wrote in the style of the old masters, such as Vivaldi, Couperin, Porpora, Pu- gnani, and others, and published as his editions of their works. For 30 years the authors were believed to be the old masters, but the truth came to light this year, and Kreisler ad- mitted having written them all. His reason, he said,was that he wanted to enlarge his programs and did not thirsk it best to have his own name a'1.pear endlessly on the pro- gram for a concert. Kreisler is a refutation of the con- tention that the child-prodigy rarely fulfills his promise, in later life, for his interest in the violin began al- most as soon as he could talk, and at the age of seven he appeared in his first concert in Vienna, after which he entered the Vienna Conser- vatory. Three years later he won the gold medal, and then went to Paris where, after two years, he won the Grand Prix de Rome. Shortly after this he went on his first tour, which included the United States, and, with the exception of a year spent in the army, he has been playing the violin in all parts of the world ever since. Tonight's concert will begin promptly at 8:15 p.m. according to President Charles A. Sink of the School of Music, and after that time there will be no seating except be- tween numbers. President Sink stated that there are still a few tickets available which may be secured at the offices of the School of Music on Maynard Street. Campbell To Talk On Samuel Clemens Prof. Oscar J. Campell of the Eng- lish department will speak at 4:15 p.m. today in the Natural Science Auditorium on the subject "The Case of Twain vs. Clemens." The talk is being delivered on the occasion of the centennial of the birth of Samuel L. Clemens, and is being sponsored by the English department. The thesis of his talk, says Pro- fessor Campbell, will be to demon- strate that the influency of Western culture, as opposed to the "genteel tradition of New England," did not destroy. the artist-Twain-in Clem- ens. Professor Campbell stated that the work of Mark Twain is of the utmost importance in American literature because he is an excellent representa- tive of Western culture. The public' is invited to the lecture, which is the University's only part in the nation- wide celebration of the centennial of Clemen's birth. Graduate School $1,500,000 More From Given Horace Raekham Estate Recording Of University's Past BegunBy Bureau Of Archives Michigan: E. Townsend, f Lanek f ............ J. Townsend, f Fishman, f ........ d ee, c ............ Jablonski, g ........ Tomagno, g ........ Slavin, g ........ Meyers, g .......... Rudness, g ........ FGF .....7 . .r 1 . . .. . 2 0 ..3.. 0 .0 .1* FP 0 0 1 0 0 0 3 0 0 4 8 "Totals ,.. Calvin Green, f ..... Daane, f ..... Kuipers, f Heeren, f,... . Vandermeer, c Holvluwer, c Broene, g,.. . Harkema, g ... Jugens, g . Ham, g...... Totals ... 17 TPA 14 0 71 0 6 2 7 0 0 6 42 TP 12 0 3 2 2 04 6 2 0 0 27, Is Part Of Program For Collection Of Michigan's1 I Historical Data By FRED WARNER NEAL An attempt to record the history of the University from the time of its founding by Father Gabriel Rich- ard more than 100 years ago until the present day - the task of the newly formed Bureau of University Archives - began yesterday. Headed by the Regents' committee of seven faculty members, the ar- chives bureau is one of the first at- tempts on the part of an American University to record its own history. The activity is a branching out of the history department's Michigan history program, headed by Prof. Lewis G. VanderVelde, which since last spring has already unearthed nearly a score of valuable finds. Although for the present the Bu- reau will confine its activities to lo- cating and collecting history of the University, its sponsors hope to see Superficiality In Learning Hit By DeanLloyd, Better Use Of Leisure Is Urged As Necessary To? Good Education An indictment of students who "leave college with a parchment but no education" was made last night by Dean Alice C. Lloyd, who spoke before 500 independent women at the second annual Assembly Ban- quet, held in the League. "Education should mean," she said, "an enlargement of our understand- ing." Miss Lloyd pointed out that far too many students come to college and merely attend their classes, without making use of the numerous opportunities of using their leisure time to best advantage. "Although the first and almost the pleasantest recreation we have is reading," she said, "I am frequently very surprised at the small amount of recreational reading done by col- lege students." Other factors in modern life which can be valuable in enlarging the un- derstandng of the student, she con-. tinued, are movies and the radio, which she claimed "are becoming something to reckon with in the po- litical and artistic side of life." Although she censured newspapers for their sensational treatment of crime, she pointed out that they fur- nish a great deal of information on vitally important matters of modern life. Miss Lloyd was followed by Donal H. Haines of the journalism depart- ment, whose topic was "Women Who Write." In discussing women in journalism he pointed out that they often make a mistake in thinking of such a ca- reer as "banishment" to the wom- en's page. "There is no feature which has grown so in modern times as the women's page," he said, "and read- ers are becoming more and more in- terested in getting the women's slant on news."~ He pointed out that the woman's temperament should be the deciding factor in whether she should start out on a small town or a metropoli- (Continued on Page 5) Parties Announce Freshman Slates William Farnsworth, Phi Kappa Psi, was selected to run for president at a caucus of the State Street fresh- man literary college held last night in the Union. Farnsworth will oppose Fred Vogt, Phi Delta Theta, Washtenaw, in the elections tomor- row afternoon. nfh- .-pr - nn- n n o e hy b hp. it progress into an actual archives department of the University. In the words of President Ruthven, "This is an effort which I hope will lead to the formation of a University archives department." Expressing himself as "very, very interested" in this "fine and much- needed action," President Ruthven termed the Bureau "the beginning of a real attempt to correlate all the; various documents of the University. They have been in so many different places and come from so many dif- ferent sources that, in the past, it has been nearly impossible to have] a comprehensive knowledge of this institution," he said. Whereas the purpose of Professor1 VanderVelde's Michigan history pro- gram is at first primarily to locate historical material, with the aim of1 eventually bringing it to the Uni- versity, the archives bureau will make4 a definite attempt to gather and col- lect, as well as locate. Although no definite place for material collected by the bureau has been decided on, the William L. Clements Library is a likely spot, it is believed. , With Miss Elizabeth Sparks as its: research assistant, the committee1 consists of Dr. Frank E. Robbins, as-I sistant to the President, chairman; Professor VanderVelde; Dr. Randolpn G. Adams, director of William L. Clements Library; Dr. W. W. Bishop, University librarian; Dean-emeritus Mortimer E. Cooley of the engineer- ing college, recently resigned state PWA head; Vice-President Shirley W. Smith; and Wilfred B. Shaw, di- rector of alumni relations. The first step of the Bureau is an attempt to get in touch with all liv- (Continued on Page 2)> Great Britain Is Reenforcing Home Defenses London Area Anti-Aircraft Forces Being Equipped' For Action LONDON, Dec. 2. - (P) - The British Government, with Europe tense as a result of sanctions de- velopments, announced tonight the; immediate reorganization of anti- aircraft defenses in the London area. A division of four anti-aircraft groups was formed, each group larg- er than an infantry brigade. Head- quarters of each group will be es- tablished where it can best cooperate with the Royal Air Force, which re- cently was expanded. The entire division is charged with the defense of London against any air attack. It was disclosed further that of- ficers and engineers in the British merchant marine, who are officers of the Royal Naval Reserve, have been called from ports all over the worll to report for duty at Portsmouth. Masters of oil tankers owned by the British Admiralty have been ad- vised to hold themselves subject to call. The Cabinet met today and ad- journed without announcing its de- cisions, but there was little doubt that it had determined to press with- out further delay for the drastic oil sanction at Geneva Dec. 12. (Mussolini is reliably reported to have warned that an oil embargo means war in Europe. France, with this knowledge, has informed Mus- solini it will stand with Britain and the League if Italy starts hostilties.) The only faint chance of averting a grave crisis over the oil issue now rests with Premier Pierre Laval, of France, who, it was said here, is mak- ing a final supreme effort to get some peace concession from Mussolini be- fore Laval confers Saturday with Sir Samuel Hoare, British foreign secre- tary. Student Takes His Life In Fear Of 'B' Grade Additional Gift Increases Total To $6,500,000; Announced By Ruthven Council Agrees To ClosingOf Street Grant Will Be Used For Purposes Of Endowment And Building An additional $1,500,000 to be used for "building and endowment pur- poses" has been given for the Grad- uate School. The new gift was made from the estate of the late Horace H. Rack- ham and raises the total donation from that estate to $6;500,000 Presi- dent Ruthven announced late yes- terday. The new grant, which will make the total gift from the Rackham fund total $6,500,000, will be used to pur- chase additional property for the site of the new Graduate School building and whatever is left after this pur- chase will be added to the $4,000,000 endowment provided for by the first gift of $5,000,000. The property to be acquired, the titles to which are already in the pos- session of the University, will be the block directly west and adjacent to the block purchased last August, which is located due north of the Michigan League building. Council Concurs The city council in its weekly meet- ing last night voted permission to close a section of Ingalls street, and thus the new building will be bound- ed by Thayer, Washington, Twelfth streets, and by Huron Ave. The entire two blocks will be used for the grounds of the new Graduate School. One of the more important qual- ifications of the agreement which was approved was that the city will have the right to take 17 feet from the west side of the University's proposed site for the purpose of widening Thayer Street between East Huron and East Washington Streets. This action is, however, contingent upon the result of a petition to the Board of Education from the Com- mon Council asking the Board to quitclaim 17 feet from the east side of the Ann Arbor High School block. Part For Endowment The city granted the Board the 17 feet, thus making Thayer Street nar- rower, some time ago. This grant was for the purpose of building an addition to the High School. As yet no additions have been made, and the Council is justified in asking the return of this property, aldermen stated in the discussion. It was announced that it was felt the new grant was necessary "to pro- vide a proper setting for the new Graduate Building," which will be a center for all graduate students. The President emphasized that it was not expected that the entire $1,- 500,000 would be used for the pur- chage of the new block and that a large amount will be left for endow- ment purposes. Not all of the original $1,000,000 granted for the new building in the first Rackham gift has been used, and approximately $750,000 of this original amount remains to be spent Razing Is Begun The work of razing the houses on the first block has already begun, and it was expected, University offi- cials said, that work of clearing the new block would begin about Jan. 1. There are more than 16 residences on the new block and eviction notices have already been issued. Plans call for the new structure to include two auditoriums, and rooms for the various societies of graduate students. Very probably recreation rooms to make the plant a complete "hub" of graduate student activity. The first gift from the Rackham fund was made last August and pro- vided that the $4,000,000 endowment would be used to support special in- vestigators in research, to provide scholarships and fellowships and to meet other expenses of research. Although this was the largest gift from the fund prior to his death last June, Mr. Rackham made possible the University's archaeological studies in Egypt and the Philippines besides . assisting other University projects. FG FP ...... .6f 0 .... . .. .0 0 . ....1 1 ..........0 2 1 0 ..... . .. 0 0 ..... ... .2 2 ...... . 1 0 .0 0 .. 0 0 .11 5 Referee: Vanwingen (WSTC). Umpire : Bos (MSC). 1 Council Adopts County Plan Of Welfare Relief In a 13-2 vote, the Common Coun- cil, meeting at the City Hall last night, agreed to accept the plan of the county board of supervisors to distribute welfare relief throughout the county. The shift in the senti- ment of the Council came after an explanation by Everett DeRyke, member of the county welfare relief commission, of the method of ad- ministration that would be used. The plan calls for the state to pay 55 per cent of the funds and for the county to pay 45 per cent. The state will pay all administrative costs. In local administration of the funds, a county case worker will determine College Professors Come To, Defense Of Midwest Accent KANSAS CITY, Dec. 2. -(P) - College professors hustled tonight to defend the midwest accent - likened to the whir of a vacuum cleaner by a Harvard educator - and scoffed at the "nasal tricks" New Englanders turn with the English language. At Harvard University, of all places, they are making a study of accent. Prof. Harry H. Hall "pho- tographed" the voice of Prof. Miles L. Henley of the University of Wis- consin, and classified his pronuncia- +i , -" f 1o tofo " l 0 - OV--- - conversation is "considerably easier to understand generally than the speech of New Englanders." "Certainly," he said, "the speech of the 'down east' New Englanders is much easier' satirized. The old time hick comedies were based on the language of New England. No Kan- sas farmer talks like that - even when signing an AAA check. "If our 's' sounds like a vacuum cleaner, some of the nasal tricks they do with an 'r' liken it to a buzz saw." Professor Hall used a microphone, enIn fi- f r omnf nr rnv 11-ns e