Weather Incrasing cloudiness and warmer today. SirP 4:IaitH Editorial A Defintion Of Terms... I VOL. XLIX. No. 166 Z-323 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, MAY 19, 1939 0r PIUCE FIVE CENTS i Campus To Elect 10 Officers Today; Three Leave Race C 7 Publications Board Field Reduced; New Entry Vies For Union Post Polling To Be Held From 1 To 5 P.M. Last-minute developments in the campus-wide election today for 10 offices in student organizations in- cluded announcement of three with- drawals from the race for the Board in Control of Student Publications, one addition to the slate of candidates for six Union vice-presidents, and announcement of two candidates for one position on the Board in Control of Athletics. Polling places will be open in 11 schools and colleges from 3 to 5 p.m. except in the literary and engineering colleges where they will be open from 1 to 5 p.m. The accompanying box contains the specific locations of all polling places.- Quick Withdraws . Following the withdrawal yesterday of George S. Quick, Grad., from the race for the Publications Board, came announcement of the withdrawal of Raymond Fredericks, '40, Robert Hartwell,.'39; and Lawrence Vanden Berg, '40, leaving eight candidates vying for the three student:positions on the Board. The list of candidates in the Publications Board election inicluded: Philip Buchen, '41L, Almon Conrath, '40E, Augustus Dannemil- ler, '40, Joh" Gelder, 40, John Hul- bert, 40, Albert P. Mayio, '39, Robert D. Mitchell, '4BAd., and Philip West- brook, '40.' To Fill Union Posts ' Six Union vice-presidents from 11 schools and colleges will be chosen in the same election. The list of cand- dates and the schools and colleges they will represent follows: Ted Spangler, '40, and Robert Harrington, '4,literary college And gaduate' choo;e Harry Howell, '40E, Douglas Tracy, '40E, Jim Wells, '40E, and Richard T Trelfa, '40E, the new addi- tion to the slate, engineering college and architecture college; Robert El- liott, AOL, and James Ritchie, '40L, Law School; William Yetzer, '40M, and Ward Johnson, '40M, Medical School; James Halligan, '40F&C, James McLeod, '4BAd., John Hart, '40 BAd., business administration school, Music School, pharmacy col- lege and education school; and Wil- iam Mann, '40D, and Raymond Fru-' tiger, '40D, dental college. James Tobin, '40, and Warren Breidenbach, '41, are the candidates for the one student position on the Board in Control of Athletics., All persons voting must have their own identification cards and must vote in person, Peter Brown, '41, in charge of elections, said. In the Board in Control election the ballot (Continued on Page 6) Film On Rats To Be Shown Program Will Aid Fund For Czech Refugees Prof. Norman Maier's $1,000 prize- winning film on, "Behaviorisms of Rats," will have its first public show- ing in Aim Arbor at 8 p.m. Sunday at Unity Hall. Part of the program of Unitarian Churches in the United States to raise funds for the care of more than 200,000 Czechoslovak- ian refugees, the showing is open to the public. Of the estimated national goal of $20,000, $15,000 will be spent for a year's service with the remainder de- voted for the assistance of stricken churches. In addition to money for physical needs, the American Uni~- tarian Association has offered com- petent American personnel to admnin- ister these funds, to help restore the shattered morale of the people and to minister to their suffering, Rer. H. P. Marley said. Business Dominates Press, Gies Asserts The power of advertising and the domination of the press by big busi- ness was discussed last night by Joseph Gies, '39, former book editor Election Information Time: 1 to 5 p.m.-Literary and engineering college. 3 to 5 P.m.-All other schools and colleges. Place: Literary college,-231 Angell Hall. Engineering college---347 W. Engineering. Architecture college-lst floor lobby. Medical School-front hall, W. Medical Building. Law School-Hutchins Hall. Music School-Main Lobby, Music School. Dental School-Main Lobby, Dental School. Business administration school, pharmacy college and education school, 110 Tappan Hall. Forestry School, 2042 Nat- ural Science. Businessmen Convene loday For Discussion Open Two-Day Meeting Of Business Alumni With Roundtable Conferences Roundtable discussion on current business problems will feature the 11th annual two-day alumni confer- ence of the School of Business Ad- ministration opening today. At the morning session beginning at 9:30 a.n. in the Rackham Amphi- theatre, speeches on "The Relation of Management and Government" and "The Responsibility of the Ac- countant to Management and to the Public" will be given by Eric L. Kohl- er, '14, and by George D. Bailey, resi- dent partner of Ernst and Ernst, Detroit who was one of the 12 wit- nesses called by the SEC in its in- vestigation of the McKesson Robbins' case. Mr. Kohler, formerly professor of accounting at Northwestern Uni- versity, is now comptroller of the Ten- nessee Valley Authority. Following a luncheon at 12:30 p.m. in the Union, at which Prof. O. W. Blackett of the School of Business Administration will discuss salaries of business graduates, several round- tables will betset up to consider prob- (Continued on Page 6) Latest returns In Senate Poll Show Interest Eight Students Are Awarded Scholarships Marsh-Mandelbaum Fund Gives $1,565 Stipend; 56 Applications Entered Five Sophomores, Three Juniors Win Announcement of the Marsh-Man- delbaum literary school scholarships for this year, totaling approximately $1,565, was made yesterday by Prof. Albert B. Peck, chairman of the scholarship committee. Three, juniors and five sophomores were awarded the scholarships. The winners of the Simon Mandelbaum scholarships, restricted to men and bearing a stipend of approximately $400 are: Emery A. Cook, Jr., '40, Tulsa, Okla.; William G. Jackson, '41, Marquette, Mich., and Michael Massa, '41, Collingdale, Pa. Fanny Ransom Marsh scholarships open to all students in the literary school were awarded to Florence M. Krenzler, '40, Cleveland and Mary Jean Sanford, '40, Kansas City, Mo. Miss Krenzler will receive $100; Miss Sanford, $75. John Pitt Marsh scholarships were given to Stanford Sobel, '41, Detroit, $70; Harry E. Goodman, '41, Leban- on, N.H., $60, and Gerald M. Waters, '41, Rome, N.Y., $60. Only 56 applications for the schol- arships were received this year by the committee, 23 less than last year's number. The scholarships are awarded on the basis of character, financial need and scholastic standing, in that order. The Marsh-Mandelbaum fund from which the scholarships are de- rived was set up in 1929 in order to perpetuate the memory of Simon Mandelbaum and Fanny and John Marsh. The total amount awardeA this year was approximately $50 less than last year's total. Members of the committee besides Professor Peck are: Prof. James E. Dunlap of the Latin department and Prof. Norman Nelson of the English department. Royal Couple See Montreal New Fraterdity Heads r _ THOMAS B. ADAMS IFC Elects Tom Adams '39-40 Head Wilbur Davidson Chosen -Daily Photos by Freedman t WILBUR S. DAVIDSON Honor Students, Are Announced 27 Are Slected To Enroll In Tutorial. System: Announcement was made yesterday of the students accepted for admis- sion to the Degree Program for Hon- ors. The program which will be inaug- urated in the fall of this year will in- clude 27 sophomores in the literary college. Those selected were: Helen A. Breed, Ralph G. Conger, Jean E. Fairfax, Barbara J. Fisher, Howard A. Goldman, Maya D. Gruhzit, Jane E. Higbee and John A. Huston. William G. Jackson, Harriet Ja- witz, Helen E. Jimerson, Karl G. Kessler, Jane L. Krause, Jeanne La- Forge, Robert J. Levine, Kenneth B. Marble and Robert Marks. Laurence E. Mascott, Mary F. Mc- Conkey, Milton Orshefsky, Harold D. Osterweil, Joan Outhwaite, Ellen F. Rhea, Neal Seegart, L. William Ses- sions, Samuel H. Sheplow and Yvonne Westrafe. Notice of a reading list for the sum- mer is expected to be included in the Daily Official Bulletin in the near future. Secretary -Treasurer; Committees Are Named Four Juniors Get Council Positions Thomas B. Adams, '40, Phi Delta Theta, was elected president of the Interfraternity Council for the com- ing year and Wilbur S. Davidson, '40, Delta Kappa Epsilon, was chosen secretary-treasurer at the annual election held last night.. Adams, of Jacksonville, Fla., was publicity chairman' for the Inter- Fraternity Ball, and chairman for the annual Pledge and Initiation Banquets. He is also a member of Sphinx, junior honorary society. Davidson, of Port Huron, ticket chairman for the Ball and head of the Interfraternity Sing, held Wed- nesday, is a member of Phi Eta Sig- ma, freshman honorary society. The new president and secretary- ;reasurer succeed Robert Reid, '39E, and Robert Canning, '39. An election of the executive com- mittee was also held by the Council, William Bavinger, '40, Sigma Phi, Robert Harrington, '40,. Kappa Sig- ma, Jack Gelder, '40, Phi Gamma Del- ta, and Hugh Estes, '40E, Delta Upsi- lon were chosen. After statements of policy from the new officers and a discussion on the fraternity cooperative:movement, IFC keys were presented to the junior staff. Those honored were: John Goodell, '40, Chi Phi; Howard Egert, '40E, Phi Gamma Delta; Clarence Sahlin, '40, Sigma Phi Epsilon, James Grace, '40, Delta Kappa Epsilon; Ed Harris, '40, Phi Sigma Delta, and Richard Liv- ingston, '40, Delta Upsilon. Hugh Estes, '40, Delta Upsilon, Robert Golden, '40, Zeta Psi; Robert Goodyear, '40E, Beta Theta Pi; Rob-. ert Johnson, Beta Theta Pi, Fritz Delpries, '40, Acacia and Austin Bee- be, '40, Alpha Kappa Lambda. Famed Airmen Visit Ann Arbor Tomlinson And Thompson To Speak At Banquet William B. Stout,, well-known air- craft designer, D. W. Tomlinson, test pilot, and Cyril Thompson, airline executive, will be among the speakers featured at the third annual banquet of the Institute of Aeronautical Sci- mces to be held tomorrow at the Union in conjunction with the Avia- tion on Parade air carnival Saturday ind Sunday at the Ann Arbor air- port. Tickets for the banquet may be ob- tained in the East or West Engineer- ing buildings or at the Department of Aeronautical Engineering office. Big Ten Track men Open Meet Today; Michigan Favored Two Witnesses Questioned In Initial Hearings On Alleged Graft Trial Of Gibb Carried Over To Second Day Gala Reception By Welcoming Accorded Throngs MONTREAL, Que., May 18.-(-- For ten crowded hours King George and Queen Elizabeth were cheered and feted today by Canada's greatest metropolis. Determined to outdoQuebec's color- ful welcome of yesterday, Montreal massed 1,000,000 cheering and flag- waving people to greet the smiling royal pair. Ticker tape floating through the air gave a New York touch to their Canadian tour as the parade of royal cars passed the Place d'Armes on their 23-mile route through the city. In spite of the poor showing Tues- lay in the current criticism poll spon- sored by the Student Senate, the re- turns for Wednesday and yesterday Indicated a definite upswing in stu- dent interest. Martin Dworkis, '40. vice-president of the Senate said yesterday. At a meeting today of members of the education committee. it is planned to forward copies of questions already decided upon to the heads of the various departments and obtain per- mission from them to circulate these lists in the classroom. Approval of the poll has already been obtained from the authorities of the literary college, Dworkis stated. However, the ballot boxes on cam- pus, in Angell Hall lobby, the Main Library, Romance Languages Build- ing, Haven Hall and University Hall, will be open today, and all students of the literary college are urged to place their written criticisms in them. Criticisms must be serious to be considered and this noll must not be taken as an opportunity to "sling mud" at any particular members of the faculty, Dworkis warned. The purpose of the poll is to determine the student opinion on, such questions as Are your courses being taught effi- ciently? Do you favor the manner and frequency with which examina= tiens are administered? And do you have any suggestions for making the University curriculum more effective; should it be more individualized? Franco Return Awaited 150 Jews Injured In Palestine Riots; HillelHead Says British Plan WillFail By HARRY M. KELSEY p Trial of County Clerk Emmett M. Gibb, asked to show cause why he g should remain in office after being w; accused of appropriating public wel- a fare funds for his own use, will con- s inue today before a special tribunal ii composed of Circuit Judge George st W. Sample and Circuit Court Com- st nissioners Lee N. Brown of Ypsilanti it and Albert W. Hooper of Ann Arbor. h Two witnesses were called by Prosecutor Albert J. Rapp and de- fending lawyer John W. Conlin dur- t ing yesterday's hearing. Mrs. Luella b Smith, deputy county clerk, testified 5 as to the original resolution creating h the county welfare fund and, when asked by Rapp if she was in charge ofd the records of that fund as she was of other county records, said sheV has "had nothing to do about it." Queried as to whether he kept t records of all money received and dis- t bursed in the county clerk's office, i J. Martin Rempp, accountant in the E clerk's office, the second witness, answered in the affirmative, with "one exception: the local emergency r relief fund." Later, when questioned by Rapp on certain billings involved in the fund, he stated, "That was handled by Mr. Gibb." Rempp testified thaf the only ac- count he had of the welfare fund was irj the form of vouchers covering amounts given him by Gibb to be turned over to the county treasurer He offered for evidence the account book in which he kept these records. Rapp produced three checks amounting to $11,687.79 which had been made payable to Gibb by the city of Ypsilanti in payment of its share of the welfare fund for three separate months. These checks, Rapp deduct-, ed from endorsements,.had been de- posited, by Gibb in an Ann Arbor1 bank, from which drafts - had been made for the same payable to a Detroit bank. The hearing will reconvene at 9:30 a.m. today in the court room of the County Courthouse. Troops Battle Harlan Sni pers Mediators Rush To Scene Of Guerilla Warfare HARLAN, Ky., May 18. -( P)--- State troops exchanged gunfire to- lay with an ambushed group as fed- eral and state mediators sped here to seek an end to the increasingly tense situation resulting from operators' refusal to sign a "union shop" con- tract with the United Mine Workers The presence of snipers, on the mountainside near the Harlan Cen- tral Mine at Totz, who fired about 10 shots as workers started to the pits also was reported. Troops did not re- turn the fire on this occasion. None was hurt in either shooting. Brigadier General Ellerbe Carter, onference Championship At Stake; Six Records, Are Expected To Fall Mtars Make Last CollegeShowing By MEL FINEBERG Six meet records hang precariously i the brink of erasure as Michigan's efending track champions prepare make Coach Charley Hoyt a going- way present of his sixth Western 'onference title in nine years of aching at the 39th annual Big Ten feet at Ferry Field today and to- orrow. The preliminaries in six track and ur field events will start at 3 p.m. day with the finals in all events heduled to begin at 1:45 p.m. to- orrow. General admission for each ay will be $1.10 while for students resenting identification cards it will e 40 cents. Meet Is 'Swan Song' The meet will be the swan song of iree great Michigan track figures- [oyt, Capt. Bill Watson and Elmer redeon. Hoyt; after nine years of oaching in Ann Arbor, will assume is duties as head coach at Yale after is meet; Watson will leave colle- late track competition to go to work s general secretary for Joe Louis nd Gedeon will concentrate on his rofessional baseball future. All three will go out in a blaze of lory. Michigan is conceded an over- helming team victory; and possibly new record team scoring. Watson hould have little trouble in defend- ag his titles in the broad jump, the hot put and the discus, and Gedeon hould romp home in the only event n which he'll, compete, the high urdles. Watson Leads Assault Watson will lead the assault on he records. He already has bettered t y over a foot the shot put mark. f 2 ft. 11/2 in. he set last year and e has surpassed Arlie Mucks' 23- 'ear-old record of 15 ft. 2 in. in the iscus. Warren Breidenbach, sensational wolverine sophomore, is expected to ead a star-studded quarter-mile -field o a new record in the 440. The old ime of 47.4 set by Binga Dismond in 916, has already been bettered by Breidenbach of two-tenths of a sec- (Continued on Page 3) Title Hopes Hit As Nine Loses To Minnesota Smick's Wildness, Poor Baserunning Combine To Defeat Team, 5-4 By NORM MnjLER Michigan's Big T e n pennant chances were rudely knocked into the realms of the long-shot possibilities yesterday afternoon, as the Wolverine baseball team coupled some more faulty fielding and baserunning to Pitcher Danny Smick's wildness in handing Minnesota 5-4 victory. The defeat catapulted the Varsity into a fourth-place tie with North- western and left the Fishermen with only a slim chance of overtaking the league-leading Purdue and Iowa nines. Smick got off on the wrong foot when he walked Frank Knox and George Boerner, the first two Gophers to face him. Phil Grossman then grounded to first-baseman Elmer Gedeon, who tossed to Smick cover- ing first. Grossman beat the play for a hit, but the Michigan twirler let the ball get away from him and Knox scored from tlhird on the error. Johnny Kundla bunted safely down the third-base line, filling the bases. and wherf Capt. Ed Roy flied deep to Charlie Pink a moment later, Boerner romped home with the second Gopher run. The Wolverines immediately turned on a bunting attack in their half of of the first and before the inning was over, had tied" the score. Pink nudged a bunt down the third-base line for a hit, Mike Sofiak caught the Minne- sota battery flat-footed with another tap a few feet in front of the plate, and Walt Peckinpaugh advanced both Dennonstrations By Jews Throughout Holy Land Protest 'White Paper' JERUSALEM, May 18.-OP)-More than 100 casualties were suffered to- night in terrific battles in the streets of Jerusalem between police and Jew- ish youths demonstrating against Britain's new policy of an indepen- dent Arab-controlled Palestine. At least 100 Jewish youths, most of them between the ages of 10 and 16, were wounded. Police suffered several casualties, and at least two of them were in- jured severely by revolver shots, After the Jews had made an or- derly demonstration march through the central streets of the city, some 5,000 Jewish youths assembled in the early afternoon in front of the district commissioner's office to carry on their protest against Britain's policy. Booing police and thi'owing stones, they drew a baton charge by police. The crowd recoiled somewhat, then pressed forward hurling stones. The police were forced to give way in order to allow time' to receive re- per hand and broke the resistance. By 9:30 Pm. more than 100 Jewish injured had been counted. Many of the injuries were serious. Police fired shots over the heads of the rioters during the battle in an effort to disperse them, In similar demonstrations at the all-Jewish city of Tel Aviv at least 40 persons received first aid hospital treatment in a number of clashes be- tween Jewish youths and police. " In the Jerusalem disorders an of- ficial of the Czecho-Slovak consulate was wounded seriously when he was attacked and stoned by a mob as he drove in his automobile near the dis- trict commissioner's office. British police reported two of their number were wounded by shots fired from revolvers in the fighting there. Many shop windows were broken by the flying stones.. The fighting climaxed a day which witnessed 175,000 Jews marching, singing, shouting and carrying pla- cards protesting the plan to put Pales- tine under Arab control and end the Jewish dream of a "national home" in the Holy Land. Many of them signed mobilization Rabinowitz Claims English Hopes For Anti-Hitler Front Seriously Hurt By LAURENCE MASCOTT "The British White Paper an- nounced Wedngsday is but another link in the policy of appeasement. It will fail miserably, both in its at- tempt to solve Palestine's problem by creating a Palestinian ghetto and in its attempt to strengthen the anti- Hitler f..ont." That is the prediction given in an interview last night by Dr. Isaac Rab- irowitz, director of the local Hillel Foundation. "How can the British government expect Poland to believe the present promises England has made to it and how can Chamberlain expect Russia to have enough faith in English prom- ises to join the anti-aggression bloc, if the English so ruthlessly break the promises, sanctified by the Bal- four declaration of 1917 and the League of Nations Mandate, that she has made to the Jews?" he asked. The first line of resistance will be in Parliament, he said. Undoubtedly those elements who have consistently