I The Weather Cloudy, local snows, colder in southeast portion today; to- morrow cloudy, warmer in west portion. oit r A6F 4o, litr4t gun ,d,6 41W Editorials The Classless Conference System ... . Criticism Must Be Considered.,. f XLVI No. 70 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 20, 1935M PRICE FIVE CENTS Pucksters Beaten By 6-5 score Berryman, Heyliger Tally Twice; Merrill Counts In Second Period Varsity Crippled By Absence Of David Rallies By McMaster Team Decide Seesaw Battle; MichiganTires At End By FRED BUESSER A husky, smooth passing McMaster University hockey team handed Ed- die Lowrey's Wolverines their first de- feat of the 1935-36 season at the Coliseum last night when they came from behind to score three goals in the third period as they outslated a tired Michigan team which used only one reserve. The score was 6-5. Play throughout the entire game was fast and marked by hard check- ing by both teams as defensive lapses were responsible for the majority of the scores. Heyliger, besides scoring two goals and two assists was the defensive star of the Wolverine team and he used his brilliant sweep-check to break up MclVaster plays at center ice. Michigan matched McMaster stride for stride up to the latter part of the final stanza when the Wolverines weakened and the Canadian six mak- ing use of ample reserve power, banged home first the tying score and then after Heyliger's score on a penalty shot, got two more goals in rapid succession to put the Hamilton team out in front to stay. Michigan Defense Faulty The Wolverire sophomore defense had trouble keeping the invaders away from goalie Low, and the win- ning tally came when the rubber car- romed off Dick Berryman's skate into the Michigan cage with less than three minutes to go in the last period. Michigan matched the Canadians and even outskated them for min- utes at a time but could not keep up the pace which McMaster was able to set with their reserve power. The first counter of the game came after 13:20 of the initial period when Williams skated in to take Apps pass in the goal mouth and ram it into the corner to put McMaster out in 1-0. A minute later Heyliger outskated the McMaster forward line and whip- ped a beautiful pass to Dick Berry- man who took the puck just inside the red line and beat goalieHutton with a blazing drive on which he had no chance to save. McMaster Ties Score Berryman made it 2-1, a moment later when he skated in to bat Jack Merrill's rebound into the net in 15:45. The Canadians tied up the game just before the end of the period when McLougram sucked Low out of the net and passed to McAdam who scored easily with the Michigan goalie prone on the ice. The second period opened with a rush as both teams put on the pres- sure. The Michigan defense failed to stop Moore as he swept down center ice and passed to Williams who beat Low with a hard shot into the upper left hand corner. Time was 3:48. McMaster continued to apply the pressure, but frequent offsides kept them in check as the Wolverines,' (Continued on Page 3) Diamond's Letter On Olympics Nets $50 Christmas Gift Philip Diamond, instructor in the German department, knows already what he is going to get for Christ- mas, because Santa Claus announced it over the radio the other night. The gift is nothing less than a check for $50, and the Santa Claus is perhaps better known as Col. Bob Newhall, sports commentator of Radio Station WLW. It seems that Mr. Diamond has some definite ideas about why the United States should not participate in the coming Olympic Games in Ber- lin. Some time ago "Colonel Bob" re- quested the hearers (including Mr. Diamond) of his daily sportscast to P aralytics Will. New Hospital Rackham Fund Donation Finances Construction Of HospitalAddition By E. BRYCE ALPERN Expected to be completed by Jan. 15, the therapeutic pool now being built in the basement of University Hospital, was given to the University by the Rackham Fund Board in order to give it proper facilities for treat- ment of patients whose muscles are paralyzed as the result of poliomye- litis or other diseases. The submersion method ofctreat- ment is based upon the fact that the force exerted upon the human body when it is under water is suffi- cient to effectually reduce the work which must be done by muscles in moving the extermities, Dr. Willis S. Peck, assistant director of the De- partment of Physical Therapy, who is in charge of apparatus, said. It is thus possible, he added, for the patient to actively exercise muscles retaining but a fraction of their nor- mal strength, sometimes even as low as five per cent. Rehabilitates Muscles The primary purpose of this meth- od, Dr. Peck pointed out, is to main- tain to the fullest efficiency the in- dividual fibers within the muscles which appear to be almost completely paralyzed. Starting with exceedingly mild exercise and gradually increas- ing the amount permitted, further paralysis resulting from disuse of the muscles is prevented, he said, and oftentimes striking degrees of re- covery are made possible. Thus re- habilitation of crippled muscles may often be brought about through a method of directed exercise. In order to carry out this form of treatment it is necessary to have at- tendants, trained in directing exer- cise, enter the pool with the patients and teach them how to use their crippled muscles. Allied Treatments Massage and various forms of light and heat treatment are so closely al-1 lied with underwater exercise, Dr. Peck stated, that the University has developed new quarters for these ex- isting services in proximity to the new pool, and when completed the new1 facilities for physical therapy of all forms will be unusually well de- veloped at the hospital. , The therapeutic pool itself, meas- uring about 15 by 25 feet, has a depth which varies from two and' one-half to four and one-half feet. Special appartus is being installed toi assist in the support of paralyzed pa- New Geology Field Station Will Be Set Up Colorado Region 'Rich In Geological Phenomena To ReplaceOld Site A new geology field station willj be set up at State Bridge, Colo., it was announced yesterday. The new Colorado station will be the site of the annual geology camp which is held each year during the summer months. The former station, which was lo- cated at Mill Springs, Ky. and at which the camp has been held for the past 16 years, will be abandoned. The region chosen for the new camp and for the field courses is "particularly rich in geological phe- nomena" officials in charge of the camp stated yesterday. The region contains excellent exposures of the various rocks and the complex his- tory of the Colorado River is re- corded in the region. Instructive examples of mountain glaciation are exhibited nearby. StateaBridge, where the camp will be located is 125 miles west of Denver and is on the Colorado River. Geology department members said the total enrollment of the camp this year would probably be limited to 20 persons, and that all interested in enrolling should hand in their names to Mrs. 0. G. Belknap in the office of the geology department. A special bulletin describing the area and character of the courses to be offered at the camp will be is- sued by the end of January, and Prof. T. S. Lovering of the geology department will give a lecture illus- trated with moving pictures and slides for those who are interested in enrolling. The dates for the camp Be Treated In Borah's 'Hat Swimming PoolInRing' For tients when submerged in the water. The water, which is purified by filtra- Sure,_Report tion and the addition of chlorine, will be maintained at a constant temper- ature of90degrees Fahrenheit, and S ator Supporting Move will be constantly circulated through j~nIo uprigMv the filtering apparatus on the floor To Secure Wisconsin's beneath. The water is warmed in G.O.P. Delegation order to prevent chilling of the pa-- _ tients and to increase their blood cir- culation, Dr. Peck said. Statement Verifies Tank Replaced The pool replaces a tank which the hospital formerly used. The presen- tation of funds for the completion of the pool and the installation of ap- paratus by the Rackham Fund was instigated, Dr. Peck declared, by the recent widespread interest in the treatment of infantile paralysis pop- ularized by President Roosevelt, who was once a patient at the Warm Springs Foundation in Georgia. The facilities which have been installed at the hospital are similar to those at Warm Springs. According to Dr. Peck, the Rack- ham Fund has "wisely provided" funds for the care of infantile par- alysis victims who, unable to go to sanitaria such as the one at Warm Springs, may receive treatment at the University Hospital. Students Pack Shops For Last Minute Buying Stores Hire Extra Help To Take Care Of Crowds Of Christnas Shoppers The Christmas season in Ann Ar- bor reached a climax yesterday as stu- dents, hurrying through the falling snow to get last-minute gifts, did a record business at campus shops and the local post office hired more than 16 clerks to handle the mailing. More than 25 persons were hired irr the campus shops, and an unusual- ly large amount of business was re- ported in gift and book stores. Nearly all the campus'shop proprietors said their Christmas business this year was better than it was in December of 1934. Only one merchant, a tailor, said his business had not picked up this week, and he admitted that it showed an increase over a year ago. The record business of 1935 was done in the post office this year, Post- master A. C. Peck said. More than 700 sacks of mail are being sent out of Ann Arbor each day, mostly to Detroit and eastern points. Long lines of persons could be seen stand- ing in front of the campus branch post office windows all day yester- day, and extra clerks were not able to take care of the rush adequately. The temperature was falling slight- ly last night as many students began their evacuation of Ann Arbor. The mercury at 7 p.m. yesterday was re- ported from the University Observa- tory at 27.3 degrees, with the indica- tion that it would continue to drop. Nearly an inch of snow fell yesterday, bringing the total for the week up to nearly three and a half inches, the Observatory said. Predictions were for a "white Christmas" in this sec- tion. PUBLICATION NOTICE With this issue The Daily sus- pends publication for the dura- ticn of the Christmas holidays. The next issue will appear Tues- day, Jan. 7. His Previous HintI Two-Day Huddle Precedes Veteran Idaho Senator's Announcemlent WASHINGTON, Dec. 19. -(P) - A statement by Sen. William E. Bo- rah, (Rep., Ida.), considered by some to be tantamount to an announce- ment that he would seek the Repub- lican nomination, was given to news-t papermen tonight in response to in- quiries. 'wo Wisconsin Republicans, after a series of conferences with the Ida- hoan, first announced that he had endorsed a. proposal to elect a Borah- for-President delegation from that state to the 1936 Republican con- vention. Asked about this, Borah replied "I told them that whatever they did along that line I would stand in with them." The original statement, by State Sen. Philip E. Nelson, of Maple, Wis., and former State Sen. Bernard Get- telman, of Milwaukee, coupled with Borah's reply, certainly projected him into the nomination race further than any previous public pronounce- ment. Borah gave a somewhat similar reply recently to friends who wished to enter his name in the Ohio pri- mary. He has never formaly an- nounced that he would be a candi- date, however, even though saying he had a "1936 objective." The Idahoan tonight explained' that Nelson and Gettelman had pro- posed putting "a delegation repre- senting the liberal forces in the party out there, and in my name." He added again that he had agreed "to go along with them." The two visiting Republicans said they would return to Wisconsin im- mediately and organize a Borah-for- President organization in their state, circulate nominating petitions, and "do all that is necessary to secure Borah-pledged delegates to the na- tional convention." They added that they had made the trip to Washington on their own volition to submit their proposal to the Idaho senator. Senior Class Dues Tangle Is Explained Payment Is Not Required For Graduation, Rich Declares In Letter Sullivan's Statement Is OfficiallyRefuted Many Calls Are Received From Worried Students Who Couldn't Pay $1 Payment of senior class dues is not a pre-requisite to graduation, it was pointed out yesterday by Prof. Dan- iel L. Rich, director of classification, in refutation of a statement recently credited to R~obert R. Sullivan, '36, senior class treasurer. SProfessorRich called attention to a notice published repeatedly by Vice- President Shirley W. Smith, which stated that non-payment of class dues has nothing to do with graduation or the status of a student as an alumni. "We have had literally dozens of worried calls from students who fear that their names will not be included on the list of graduates or that they will be denied graduation, unless sen- ior dues are paid," Professor Rich wrote The Daily. Sullivan's statement in Tuesday's Daily, declared that "unless these dues are paid, seniors will be unable to have their names inluded on the list of graduates, will not receive their leather bound commencement invi- tations, and it is expected that they will not be able to purchase Senior Ball tickets."_ Sullivan last night said that his statement was "misunderstood." What really happens to seniors who neglect payment of their $1 dues, he explained, is that their names will be excluded from the list of graduates in the class' commencement invi- tations. He denied having intended to intimate that non-payment of dues really affects graduation. Professor Rich wrote The Daily that "Out of sympathy for many stu- dents to whom a dollar means a dol- lar, I want to request that you cor- rect a statement appearing on page one, column one, of your issue of Tuesday, Dec. 17: 'Unless senior class dues are paid, seniors will be unable to have their names included on the list of graduates.' "The following notice, Professor Rich continued," has been published repeatedly by Vice-President Shirley W. Smith: 'Notice to seniors - in answer to several inquiries, payment of class dues is not a pre-requisite to graduation, and non-payment of dues will not affect a student's alumni standing. Shirley W. Smith.' Borglum Envisions New Mountain Job CHICAGO, Dec. 19. - UP) - Gut- zon Borglum, sculptor of national monuments, has his eye on another mountain. Here to report to the Mt. Rush- more Commission on the progress on the great South Dakota job of carv- ing during the past year, the sixty- four-year-old craftsman disclosed that he would prepare models this winter for a proposed memorial to be whittled from a mammoth rock that rises from the floor of the desert near El Paso, Tex. MAKE 'ENSIAN PAYMENTS In order to benefit from the re- duced price of the 1936 Michigan- ensian, students are urged to make payments, now due, today at the Student Publications Building. (Peace His Grandson Released Students To Hit Trail Homeward By Dog Sled A dog-sled will convey Thomas Jef- feries, '36, and John A. Washburn, '37, to their homes next week -and they live, not in the Far North, but right here in Michigan. Jefferies and Washburn both live in Ironwood, where the snow gets very deep at this time of year. The only train they can get from here takes them no further than Minoca, some 50 miles from their city home. From Minoca, which has no busses or interurbans, they have to take a dog-sled, and it usually takes them a full day, and sometimes more, they report. Last year neither Jefferies or Washburn went home because the snow was represented as too deep, they said. Ironwood is more than; 800 miles from Ann Arbor, farther away than either New York City or Chicago. Commons Upholds Government On Its Plan Move -Associated Press Photo. Caleb Milne, Jr., wealthy Phila- delphia textile manufacturer, re- joiced yesterday when he learned that his son had been released by alleged abductors. No ransom was paid. (See article on page 2.) Murder Hnted In T elma Todd MyLTsteryDeth Jury Foreman Declares Monoxide Killing Might Be Solution Of Mystery LOS ANGELES, Dec. 19. -(P) - George W. Rochester, foreman of the Los Angeles County grand jury, de- clared tonight evidence he has gath- ered indicates strongly that Thelma Todd, screen actress, might have been a "monoxide murder" victim. Rochester announced he had is- sued a subpoena for Pasquale de Cicco, former husband of Miss Todd and an artists agent. De Cicco now is in New York. He left Los Angeles by airplane the dayi after the body was found. He said he was zooming east to spend the holi- days with relatives. "We are not pointing the finger of suspicion at anyone," said Rochester. We are anxious to learn from Mr. De- Cicco whether there was anything in Miss Todd's life that might lead him to believe she was murdered." De Cicco was asked by Rochester to appear before the grand jury Monday morning when it will investigate the strange death of Miss Todd, whose body was found last Monday morn- ing in her garage. The coroner's jury yesterday gave a verdict of ap- parent accidental death by monoxide gas fumes from the automobile ex- haust, but recommended further in- vestigation. A steady stream of persons filed through a mortuary chapel today for a last glimpse of Miss Todd. Police reserves were called to the undertaking parlors on West Wash- ington boulevard, but there was no disturbance. The crowd was com- posed mostly of movie fans, but in- cluded studio associates and friends of the actress who was found dead in her garage Monday. Blind SenatorHurt CriticallyBy Auto WASHINGTON, Dec. 19. -() - Thomas D. Schall, blind senator from Minnesota, was struck by an auto- mobile on a heavily traveled high- way near this city tonight and in- jured critically. Schall, a Republican, is one of the Capitol Hill's most bitter critics of the Roosevelt administration. The accident occurred at Cottage City, Md., a few miles north of this city. Schall, hurried to a Washing- ton hospital, was reported to have suffered internal injuries, a fractured leg and lacerations of the head. Baldwin, Adherents Plead Guilty To An Error Of Judgment On Proposals Hoare Is In Tears; Baldwin Apologetic Fear That League 'Would Break Up' Was Impetus Behind Peace Attempt LONDON, Dec. 19. --UP) --The British Government won a sweeping victory in the House of Commons on its handling of the African peace plan. A Labor motion of censure was defeated, 397 to 165. LONDON, Dec. 19.-- (/P)--Prime Minister Stanley Baldwin and his government today pleaded guilty to an error of judgment in approving the Hoare-Laval peace proposals and threw themselves on the mercy of the huge majority in the House of Com- mons. The House of Lords, without a di- vision, upheld the government after debate on the peace plan. The long-awaited disclosure be- hind the widely condemned scheme which startled the world fizzled out in a simple confession by Baldwin that he had made a mistake. Pale and obviously worried, Bald- win spoke to a House which displayed much hostility. He followed Sir Samuel Hoare, co-author of the plan with Premier Laval, of France. Sir Samuel resigned last night as For- eign Secretary because of the wide- spread opposition to the formula, Hoare in his 45 minutes of ex- ::lanation, said fear that. the League vaould break up rather than fear of "any Italian threat" was behind the British peace move. After defending his stand, Hoare left the House in tears. The Prince of Wales attended for Hoare's speech. Baldwin said he would not let such a mistake happen again and that it was a lesson to him. Baldwin said the peace plan was "absolutely and completely dead" and that the British Government would not attempt to resurrect it. LAVAL'S FALL PREDICTED PARIS, Dec. 19.--(V)-The over- throw of Premier Pierre Laval's cab- inet next week because of his agree- ment with Sir Samuel Hoare on an Ethiopian peace plan was predicted tonight in lobbies of Parliament. At the same time fear grew of a possible spread of the African war to Europe. SELASSIE CLAIMS VICTORY (By The Associated Press) Claims that Italian forces hadfled the Takkaze River front t"in great disorder, leaving the battlefield strewn with dead," were. dispatched to Emperor Haile Selassie Thursday by Dedjazmatch Ayale, commander of the Ethiopian Army on the left bank of the stream. 11,500 Teachers 1To 'Obtain Jobs AfterHolidays State WPA Plans To Hire Instructors From Relief Rolls, Director Says Employment for 1,500 teachers was assured yesterday by the announce- ment of Harry L. Pierson, State WPA Administrator, that he has approved the launching of a state-wide educa- tional program immediately after the holidays. Nearly all the teachers will be re- cruited from relief rolls. Their ac- tivities, embracing every phase of ed- ucation from the direction of nursery schools to freshman colleges, will en- able 25,000 persons of all ages to ad- vance their learning, he said. Students who complete their sub- jects under the new teachers with the proper grades will be accredited with the equivalent of first-year rank- ing in the University of Michigan, Wayne University, Michigan State Decline Of Community Feeling'Among Michigan Farmers Noted By Holmes The decline of community feelingI among the farming population of Michigan is indicated in the research1 work being carried on by Prof. Roy H. Holmes of the sociology department. According to a set of conclusions he has drawn from correspondence carried on with more than 200 rural inhabitants of the state, sentiment for community life among farmers is decreasing because of their indivi- dualistic outlook, because of an in- creasing dependence on the radio, and because of the confining nature of farm work. munity agency, is in many cases giv- ing way to the radio, which links the farmer to the whole world with an attendant loss of interest in near- by community affairs." Another set of conclusions drawn up by Professor Holmes points out that on farms "the home is a much more influential agency in the de- velopment of the child than is the case elsewhere." Regarding child labor on the farms, Professor Holmes believes that "a considerable number of children are carrying much more than their right- doubtedly favorable result of the farm child's regular work habits is the relatively low rate of juvenile delin- quency in country districts." Moral standards among rural peo- ple are indicated by such statements as "I feel that we should start a crusade against cigarettes. The mag- azines and papers advertise them a great deal. Young school girls think it smart to smoke," and "It has al- ways seemed to me that a girl who was hitch-hiking lacked modesty." One correspondent protests, "I'm just skeptical of getting any relief