I The Weather Clcudy and unsettled with loal light snow today; tomor- row cloudy. Iddommuft- A~~~Afr43f 4:3attu Editorials Take Hypocrisy Out Of Football ... To Be Or Not To Be ... VOL. XLVI No. 66 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1935 PRICE FIVE CENTS Peace Is Predicted In Geneva Cessation Of Hostilities Is Hinted; Mussolini Views Plans With Doubt Foreign Control Of EthiopiaIs Urged Duce's Answer Expected After Fascist Council MeetingWednesday Predictions of a complete cessation of hostilities in Ethiopia came out of Geneva last night as Mussolini, in Rome, continued to view the Franco- British peace plan with doubt. GENEVA, Dec. 14.- (P) - A com- plete cessation of hostilities was said privately by several delegates to the League of Nations tonight to be a necessary part of the inauguration of any Italo-Ethiopian peace negotia- tions. This proposal came forward in an undersurface struggle over the peace plan advanced by France and Great Britain. The smaller powers main- tained that any concessions to Italy might mean the death knell of the League and of collective security. A belief appeared to be growing that Ethiopia will be put under some form of foreign guidance - primarily one of the League supervision -but that the League council cannot go on record as approving the Franco- British peace plan. Meanwhile the question of an oil embargo has been laid aside. ROME, Dec. 14. -WP) -Premier Mussolini showed a persistent cool- ness toward the Franco-British peace plan and informed sources expressed doubt tonight of the formula's suc- cess. Plain dissatisfaction with the terms was shown in several ways and Il Duce -asked for "clarification.". Since the proposals were put for- ward as a "basis for discussion," Mus- solini may accept this, but informed sources said he would never settle on the lines offered.. I Duce's answer to Paris and Lon- don is expected after a midnight ses- sion of the Fascist grand council next Wednesday. JIJIGA, Ethiopia, Dec. 14. - P) - Dr. Robert W. Hockman, twenty- eight-year-old American missionary to Ethiopia and active Red Cross worker, was blown to bits yesterday at Daggah Bur, on the southern front, while examining an unexploded Ital- ian bomb, it was learned today. Since the outbreak of hostilities Dr. Hockman has worked untiringly for the Ethiopian Red Cross. He established the first medical unit on the front. 31 Students Are Elected To Phi Kappa Phi 7 Faculty Men Also To Bei Honored At Meeting Of Local Chapter Thirty-one students were elected to the Michigan chapter of Phi Kappa Phi, it was announced yesterday, and seven faculty members will also be honored at the initiation banquet to be held at 6:30 p.m. Monday in the Union. Those students elected to the honor society are Grace Bartling, '36, Mar- vin Becker, '36, Winifred Bell, '36, Paul Brown, '36A, Ilene Brunson, '36, Franklyn Burger, '36M, Keith Camp- bell, '36Ed, Dorothy Carr, '36, Bessie Curtis, '36Ed, James Davis, '36, John De Young, '36E, Nelson Droulard, '36E, Willis Fisher, '36, Margaret Hiscock, '36, Emil Isberg, '36-'38M, and Harry Jurow, '36M., Others who will be initiated are: Bertram Lebeis, '36-'38L, John Odle, '36, Carlyle Parker, '36E, Robert Pekelsma, '36E, Robert Rogers, '36, Theodore Rose, '36M, Edward Sey- bold, '36M, Mildred Shapley, '36, J. Gordon Steele, '36-'38B-Ad, Robert Stevens, '36E, Ann Timmons, '36, James Van Doren, '36D, George Var- ga, '36, Edward Wendrow, '36-'38L, and David Witheridge, '36E. The faculty men to be honored are Jewish Leader Speaks Cagers Down State; Hockey Six Wins, 5-4 Basketball Team Rallies In Second Half To Best Michigan State, 35-24 London A.C. Falls RABBI ABBA H. SILVER Dr. Silver Will Talk Today In Lecture Series Will Speak On 'Religion A Changing World' 8 P. M. In Union In At Continuing the series of lectures sponsored by the religious education committee Rabbi Abba Hillel Silver of Cleveland will speak at 8 p.m. to- day in the Michigan Union ballroom on "Religion in the Changing World." Dr. Silver has been secured for this second of the series of religious lec- tures through the cooperation of Dr. Bernard Heller, director of the Mich- igan Hillel Foundation which is spon- soring the talk in conjunction with the religious committee. In additionto thepublic lecture Dr. Silver will address an invited group of University professors and local clergymen at a dinner given in his honor. He will speak on "Jewish Religion in Western Culture." During the afternoon Dr. Silver will be at the Hillel Foundation where the students will have an opportunity to meet him in the open house re- ception sponsored by the Hillel Coun- cil under the direction of Shirell Kasle, president. Dr. Silver is prominent in several national religious organizations and has been a Jewish spiritual leader in Cleveland since 1917. He is the au- thor of three books: "Democratic Impulse in Jewish History," "Mes- sianic Speculation in Israel," and one which bears the title of the lecture, "Religion in a Changing World." He has been equally prominent in member of both the National Child Labor Commission in 1931 in addition to other bureaus and boards. The speaker will be introduced byI Dr. Heller. The purpose of the re- ligious series is to encourage the work of the religious organizations and stimulate religious thinking among the various denominations by offering outstanding speakers in public lec- tures. Hauptiann Learns Death Time Calmly TRENTON, N. J., Dec. 14. - (P) - Bruno Richard Hauptmann calmly received the news today that the week of Jan. 13 had been set for his death in the electric chair for the kidnap I murder of Charles A. Lindbergh, Jr. An unnamed prison guard, dele- gated by Col. Mark 0. Kimberling, principal keeper, broke the news to the condemned man. As Heyliger Stars Buysse's Blind Shots Only Weapon That Puzzles A Strong Varsity Defense Michigan's Varsity basketball and Hockey teams both gained victories in homeaappearances last night. Coach Franklin Cappon's rangy basketball five came back strong in the second half to hand the Michigan State cagers a 35-24 trimming, while the hockey sextet opened its season with a hard-fought 5 to 4 win over the London A. C. squad. By WILLIAM R. REED A second-half drive which netted 21 points gave Michigan a 35-24 cage victory over the Spa tans of Michi- gan State last night in Yost Field House. Playing without big John Gee, who was sent to the University Health Service yesterday afternoon with a' severe cold,the Wolverines found themselves only after a first half which ended with the score 15-14 against them, and settled down dur- ing the second period to offensive play about John Townsend and tight defensive play which kept the Spar- tans from working the ball into posi- tion for set plays. George Rudness, with two baskets and five foul throws was high point man for Michigan while Maurice Buysse, State's blind-shot specialist, was high scorer of the game with 11 points. Sharing scoring honors for the Spartans was Howard Kraft with eight points, while Captain Chelso Tamagno and Earl Townsend added to the Michigan total with seven points each. Confronted with the defensive problem of stopping Buysse and his (Continued on Page 3) By FRED BUESSER Paced by the brilliant Vic Hey- liger who scored five goals in the first two periods, a fighting Michigan hockey team, beset at the most in- opportune times by damaging in- juries, managed to cling to a slender one-goal lead throughout the last two minutes of the third period last night to outlast the London Athletic Club and open its 1935-36 season with a 5-4 victory. Thoroughly outplayed throughout the first period and a half, London came back with a rush in the final stanza to score three goals and bring the crowd -the largest ever to at- tend an opening hockey game - to its feet as the Wolverines strove des- perately to defend their lead. Minus the services of Captain Larry David who was forced out of the game midway in the second period with a bad shoulder injury, and with both Dick Berryman and Bert Smith play- ing with bandages covering nasty cuts, Michigan fought desperately throughout the whole period as they saw their four-goal margin melt away goal by goal. The stands were in an uproar as the Canadians, in a series five man rushes carried the play to the Wolverines and kept the puck constantly insMichigan territory. Heyliger spent little time getting started as he swept around the Lon- (Continued on Page 3) Engineers To Vote On Most Commonly Despised Professor That question which probably troubles mare incoming freshmen than any other - who is the most popularly unpopular professor?-will be settled for this year Wednesday night, if the presence of too many aspirants for the honor does not re- sult in a tie. To determine the individual who is the answer to this momentous ques- tion the A.S.M.E. is sponsoring to- morrow a "primary" election in which each student will be allowed one -- and only one-- ballot upon which to mark his choice. As a special con- cession each voter will be allowed one sentence in which briefly to sum- marize the reasons for his selections. Large strong ballot boxes have been placed in the East Engineering Build- ing lobby and on the second floor, over the arch, of the West Engineer- ing Building. Final selection of the professor most worthy of succeeding John Grennan, foundry instructor, as pos- sessor of the distinctive trophy awarded by the A.S.M.E. on this oc- ,asion will be made from the high ranking men in the "primary" voting. This final choice will be taken at the society meeting Wednesday night in the Union. Churches Plan Many Services For Christmas With B ig Sale Tomorrow Speaking Of Samaritans When Dobbin gave way before the stream-lined super-charged gas buggy of the modern age, he took with him the kind of neigh- borly consideration which made other human beings worth knowing. Startling to the country visitor in the city is the hostile glare with which grumpy people stab each other in street cars, on street corners. In the country, the human bond between fellow travellers on a strange planet to an unknown destination is perceivable in the smile which passes even between strangers - the bond of humanity which alone remains when, as in these past few years, material things reveal their impermanency. The kind of cold impersonality which characterizes the selfish, self-concerned automaton who lives close-packed in apartment houses is apparent from time to time to us in our drive to put across the idea of the Goodfellow edition of The Daily which is to be issued tomorrow. From many a mouth came the protest: "But I just gave something to somebody else." We are overcome by a kind of cold fury when meeting those people who believe their obligations to fellow human beings is ended by making one small contribution each year - and when we see others faced by the hard reality of scrubbing out a meager existence from garbage cans of our civilization, we'd like to scrub the smug complacent faces of these automatons in the gravel until they bleed with human sympathy. The cause of the Goodfellows is not the only one, nor does one's obligation to humanity end with the purchase of one of their papers. But our Goodfellow Daily, we hope earnestly, will help to take care of some of these people we've been seeing these past few weeks - kids without shoes, undernourished, families where the mother dies and leaves five, bewildered and unprotected, students to whom the privilege of going to school means so much that they are willing to do without food. We'll have them in mind when we ask you to buy a Goodfellow Daily tomorrow; we hope you'll be thinking of them too. Special Programs Given On Last Before Holidays Goodfellow Daily Comes To Aid Of Local Needy To Be Sunday Many and varied special Christmas services are being planned by the Ann Arbor churches for the last Sun- day before the student holidays. In the Unitarian Church there will be held a unique type of Christmas program at 5:30 p.m. today. Con- trasting the child of the first century with the child of today, the service will include poetic and musical selec- tions delivered as if addressed to the Child Jesus. Then the Rev. H. P. Marley will speak to a modern group representing the child, its mother and its nurse, embodying the change from the earlier period. At the First Congregational Church Dr. Edward W. Blakeman, counsellor in religious education, will lecture on "Wesley, Strong Man of the Spirit" at 10:30 a.m. and a special medita- tion upon Christmas will be delivered by the Rev. Allison Ray Heaps as part of the service. Selections by in- strumental ensembles will also fea- ture the program; and at 7:30 p.m. a candle-light musical service will be held by Sigma Alpha Iota. Dr. C. W. Brashares will preach on "God Before Christmas" at 10 :45 a.m. in the First Methodist Church. Prof. Lowell J. Carr of the sociology de- partment will address the student group at noon in Stalker Hall; and at 6 p.m. a Christmas program spon- sored by Kappa Phi will be held in the Hall. The morning services of the St. Andrew's Church, with a sermon by the Rev. Henry Lewis, will be at 11 a.m. At the student meeting to be held at 7 p.m. in Harris Hall, Prof. Louis M. Eich of the speech depart- ment will give a "Christmas Read- ing." The Rev. R. E. Sayles will speak on "Ezekiel, the Priest Prophet," at 10:45 a.m. in the First Baptist Church. Dr. Leroy Waterman of the oriental lang- uages department will conduct his class at 9:45 a.m. in the Guild House, and a student class will meet there at noon. The Rev. Fred Cowin will preach the sermon of the Morning Worship at 10:45 a.m. today in the Church of Christ Disciples. The Students' Bible class will meet at noon. There (Continued on Page 4) THURSTON RETURNS TO STAGE MIAMI BEACH, Fla., Dec. 14.- (AP) - Stricken 10 weeks ago with par- alysis in his left side, Thurston, the magician, today has regained his health and plans to return to the stage. His first appearance since his illness will be in Charlestown, W. Va., where he was stricken. Rural Life Of State Sounded By Prolific Correspondent By BERNARD WEISSMAN First-hand accounts from 'Michi- gan farmers of everything from po- litical dogmas to personal problems are being carefull pieced together in- to a composite picture of the rural life of the state by Prof. Ray H. Holmes of the sociology department, the University's most prolific corres- pondent. Since he wrote his first letter to a farmer on Oct. 10, 1932, Professor Holmes has steadily enlarged his cor- respondence until today he writes, and hears from more than 200 rural inhabitants in all sections of the state. He has, at one time or another, been in touch with about 425 farm- ers, and has received more than 2,000 letters. The undertaking, known as the Rural Sociology Correspondence Proj- ect, is being carried on partly to in- vestigate "rural culture and the so- cial psychology of farm people," and partly to assist the farmers of the state in solving all types of problems that may present themselves. Every month Professor Holmes col- lects the most interesting extracts from the mail of the previous month and sends a copy of these to each of his corerspondents for their com- ments. Predicts Death Of Football In 1942 PHILADELPHIA, Dec. 14. - (P) - Philip O. Badger, chairman of the board of athletic control of New York University, said today intercollegiate football as it exists at present "will be dead in 1942" unless "those in a position of .trust as heads of insti- tutions get down to business." Badger, speaking at the annual meeting of the Middle Atlantic States Conference, said college football af- ter 1942 "would be professional as against amateur" if officials did not stop "dodging responsibilities and ra- tionalize athletics." He expressed the belief intercol- legiate athletics were on the verge of a "really significant rationalization on a broad front.j Beginning last month, he inaug- urated the practice of listing general conclusions derived from his letters and soliciting reactions from his cor- respondents about them. A typical extract, written by a woman who is a Sunday School of- ficial, says, "We have a group in the neighborhood who made considerable comment and resented my activities because I play cards, dance, and thoroughly enjoy life and they do not." Economic problems also come in for considerable discussion. A coun- ty school superintendent writes, "The surrounding farmers are talking of having a penny sale if the sheriff at- tempts execution of the contract," and "There are at least 80 per cent of the farmers of the community who are now residing on farms and are scheduled to go on the welfare or some other institution, if they do not have help." The difficulty of reconciling urban and rural ways of living is illustrated in the statement, "Many city resi- dents have bought farms and moved their families here, especially during the depression. These people have come from Chicago, Detroit, South Bend, and other cities. They have come with new ideas and their own ideals, forming a new community life among themselves." Professor Holmes has found that he can get better cooperation from the farmers by approaching them (Continued on Page 4) Football Star Is Sentenced On Larceny Charge Leslie Anderson, 26 years old, fresh- man football star here in 1930, and Stanley Owens, 36, both of Grass Lake, were sentenced to serve terms of not more than 15 years in the States' Prison of Southern Michigan at Jackson in circuit court yesterday, by Judge George W. Sample on a charge of robbery unarmed. Anderson was convicted on a sim- ilar charge by Justice Jay Payne, when he was playing football here. He was placed on probation for five years, on the earlier charge after it had been reduced from a charge of rob- bery armed. The two men were sen- tenced yesterday for holding Roscoe Bickford, Jackson taxi driver, last Oc- tober near Lima Center, taking his cab which they later abandoned in 'Newsboys' Will Take To The Streets For Sepical Edition Sales Goodfellows List New Contributions Leading Senior Students Don Aprons In Effort To Swell Fund The Goodfellow edition of The Daily will come to the aid of Ann Arbor's needy tomorrow. Fifty of the University's leading senior students will don their Good. fellow aprons and occupy the street corners of Ann Arbor tomorrow as their drive to provide food and clothing for needy students, children and families reaches its climax. Faculty, students and administra- tion officials, 200 strong, have united behind the front of the Goodfellows in contributing advance subscrip- tions to the issue for more than $400, even before the issue is off the press. New contributions, new offers of as- sistance in sales and distribution have poured constantly into the office of the Goodfellow editor of The Daily. Thanks from the Goodfellow Editor have been extended to the following honorary Goodfellows, for courtesies and professional contributions: Frank Oakes, of Burr, Patterson & Auld; Edward C. Pardon, superintendent of the Building & Grounds Dept.; Alfred Scha.ca, ofMaier, Schairer & Co.; Alex Fox, of Fox Tent & Awning Co.; Miss Ethel McCormick, social director of the League; Stanley Waltz, manager of the Union; the managers of the Michigan and Ma- jestic theatres; and the following members of The Daily mechanical de- partment: Kenneth L. Chatters, fore- man, E. L. Whitney, Tom Patterson, Ralph LaCoursiers, Lee Gildart, Lauren Kinsley, and Rex Lee Beach. Organizations which have an- nounced contributions to the fund to date include the following: Contributors to Goodfellow Fund League Council .............$35.00 Alpha Sigma Phi............. 5.00 Alpha Tau Omega ............. 5.45 Chi Phi ......................21.00 Chi Psi .....................10.00 Delta Sigma Pi ...............5.00 Delta Upsilon ................25.00 Lamtla Chi Alpha ............10.00 Phi Sigma Delta .............. 8.00 Sigma Alpha Epsilon ..........10.00 Sigma Alpha Mu ..............10.00 Tau Kappa Epsilon ............ 5.00 Theta Delta Chi ..............34.00 Theta Xi...................5.00 Triangles....................5.00 Zeta Beta Tau................10.00 Hillel Foundation ..............1.00 McEachran House............'7.00 Zeta Tau Alpha ............... 4.00 Alpha Gamma Delta .......... 5.00 Delta Delta Delta .............10.00 Delta Gamma...............10.00 Sorosis...1000 Gamma Phi Beta............10.00 Sigma Chi ...................20.00 Kappa Nu..................15.00 Kappa Alpha Theta ..........10.00 Chi Omega ...................10.00 League Houses (Total) ........41.21 New contributing members of Goodfellows' Club, in addition to con- tributing organizations: Henry C. Adams, Helen M. Gilles- pie, Mrs. D. M. Cowie, Wassily Bese- kirsky, Mrs. Laura Littlefields, Fred- erick P. Jordon, Bill Kelly, C. P. Mer- lino, Everett S. Brown, Albert E. Palmer, Gerry Rossman, William F. Parker, Rodney Schackland, Robert V. Baxley, Miss Ethel McCormick, Fred Norris. R. C. Angell, Howard Johnson, R. Davis, Wallace E. Bash, William O'- Connell, Richard Pohly, Bart Kourit, Bud Lundahl, Willis A. Hasty, Irving F. Levitt, Jerome Patterson, P. Tre- zise, M. P. H. S. Meltze, William C. Bergman, Helen Rankin, Gertrude Veneklasen, Mary Alice Baxter, C. J. Hedetniemi. Nell Gwyn's Company Is Unique In Annals Of American Theatre When the curtain rises at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre Monday eve- ning on the production of Bronson Howard's play "The Henrietta," it will usher in the sixth consecutive season of an organization which is unique in the annals of the Amer- ican theatre. Nell Gwyn's Company, as it is called, is a group of theatrically in- clined people from Ann Arbor and vicinity whose sole object is the re- vival of forgotten masterpieces of the English and American stage. Al- though its activities are pursued with- out fanfare and even without the knowledge of many in the community, the company begins this year stronger than ever, with ambitious plans for The first production, Sheridan's "A Trip to Scarborough," was directed and produced by Prof. Howard M. Jones of the English department, who was and is the moving spirit of the group. Begun with no preten- sions and small hope of eventual pro- duction in the theatre, its first per- formance took place in a local draw- ing-room before a small but critical audience interested primarily in the play. It was only after this trial performance had impressed an in- terested group that the decision to produce the play was made. The production was finally given, before an invited audience, at the old Mimes Theatre, now the Play Production Laboratory workshop. F - ------ - - - --.--.- - -.-- -- -- - - - To The Goodfellow Editor:I Z wish to lend a helping hand to students children and families for whom there would be no Christmas otherwise. Enclosed find my contribu- I tion o$.........1l ONLY 5M ore