Weather Ci~adW, s~ewbt colder witho~caic~ii Qo'. 4v A*F A&M 4if t r4 ij lal t til Editorial !namĀ© extansm I VOL. L. No. 101 Z-323 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, FEB. 22, 1940 PRICE FIVE CENTS Russia Orders Home Experts From Turkish Industry Posts Kremlin Calls For Exodus Of Technicians After Recent German Move; Press Talks Of War ISTANBUL, Feb. 21.-()-Soviet Russia today called home hundreds of Russian technical experts em- ployed for years in Turkish industry under a Russian-Turkish agreement. Their exodus will follow closely that of technicians from Germany, Russia's partner. Russia already was liquidating her commercial organiza- tions in this country and Germany, Turkey's World War ally is doing likewise. The Russians, ordered by the Kremlin to leave immediately, were expected to embark with their fami- lies for Odessa, Russian Black Sea port. The Russian Embassy at An- kara first received the order and then notified those affected. Turkey Is Worried The Russian action came at a time when the Turkish press openly is dis- cussing the possibility of war in this part of the world in the spring, per- haps centering about Russia's rich oil fields in the Caucasus, just across the Turkish border. President Ismet Inonu and the Turkish general staff recently in- spected the Russian frontier and they are expected to survey the Greek and Bulgarian border fortifications shortly. Usually reliable quarters reported today that 50 Britisn engineer offs: cers had arrived at Adrianople 0 inspect the fortifications on the Bul- garian frontier, where work recently was stepped up by the army. On War Footing Turkey, an ally or Great Britain and France but so far a non-belliger- ent, is virtually on a war footing and has been looking to her fortifications on all borders as well to her domestic establishmet.' Accordingto the Turkish press Turkey will enter the war the mom- ent any foreign ower attacks the Balkans. Intense military prepara- tions, in cooperation with Britain and France, have been under way for months in this strategic region, key to Europe's "back door." Class Of 1940 To Collect Dues One Dollar To Be Solicitec?! From Each Member Senior dues of one dollar per stu- dent will be collected by the Finance Committee of the Class of 1940 start-; ing next Tuesday in Angell Hall, it was announced last night by Mar- garet Neafie, '40, treasurer. The three-fold purpose of the dues this year is as follows: 1. Pay for the senior class page in the 'Ensian. 2. Pay for incidental expenditures such as posters and stationery. 3. Set up a class fund which will be turned over to the Clai Officers' Council of the Alumni Association. The money will be used to keep class1 organization together after gradua-t tion by maintaining contacts be- tween officers and members and pro- viding for reunions at five-year in- tervals. The Finance Committee consists of l Don Nixon, chairman, Wally Hinkle,3 Jack Luxan, Louis Grossman, Miriam 2 Szold and Ann Platt. Ruth Chapard,X Jay Rockwell, Gordon Laing. andf Dorothy Nichols are also on the com-I mittee. Dorm Workers Protest Heard By University Certain "suggestions" made by Uni- versity dormitory workers will be "taken under consideration" during the next few days by University offi- cials, it was announced yesterday following a conference between Vice- President Shirley W. Smith and repre- sentatives of an AFL union of dormi- tory workers. The conference had been requested by members of the union, who claimed that wage rates and working condi- tions were below adequate standards. Vice-President Smith announced after the meeting that he had heard "certain definite requests," and said that the University would "take them under consideration." Mr. Smith said that a "clear prom- ise" had been made to the workers that dormitory officials would not "discriminate" in any manner against' employees who joined the Union. Representatives of the labor union announced that the meeting had been "successful from every standpoint," and said that they expected to meet with University officials sometime early in March. Among the "suggestions" which were made at the meeting, the labor leaders said, were proposals for "bet- ter wages, better working conditions, better overtime wages, and improved regulations in general." Egyptian Curse Branded False By Steindorff University Lecturer Says Articles About Tombs Are 'Merely Stories' A scientist who has outlived the men of his generation, Dr. Georg Steindorff, famed Egyptologist and former professor in the University of Leipzig, came to Ann Arbor yester- day to present his views on peoples of ancient Egypt. Aged Dr. Steindorff, who is one of the founders of the modern study of Egyptology, discredited the popu- lar belief that an ancient curse falls upon present-day defilers of Egyp- tian tombs. In an interview fpllowing his lec- ture in Rackham Amphitheatre, Dr. Steindorff branded the numerous newspaper articles about the sup- posed curse as "merely stories." He explained that only one curse against the opening of tombs existed, and applied in the distant past to the Egyptian practice of reutilizing crypt stones for building purposes. The unfortunate deaths which have been attributed to the King Tutankhamen excavations were ob- viously caused by natural forces, he asserted, the last death taking place 15 years after the tomb's discovery. Michigan's Three Year Old Ice Carnival Will Present 'Silver King', Skating Show All A'Students Swedish Town Are Announced I Is Bombarded A three year-old campus baby which makes a shivering appearance each winter will let out a lusty bellow at 8 p.m. tomorrow in the Coliseum and then slap its royal rattle on the noggin of a local big-wig. The monicker of the gurgling in- fant is the University of Michigan Ice Carnival. The cranium to be crowned tomorrow night by the tot's celluloid scepter is that of Footballist Forest Evashevski '41, henceforth to be designated the Carnival's "Silver King." Two developments yesterday marked the extensive preparations for the frozen-water frolic. They were: 1. An air-mail cargo of "treasure" to be distributed' by the Silver King during the evening was shipped from New York City, the only place where such treasure can be found. No Jitterbugs 2. Local long-hairs clapped a ban on rug-cutting after the regular pro- gram, as had been announced. Ob- jections were raised by the rink man- agers, in a stirring condemnation of jitterbugging, jiving and hep-cats. Earlier, the program for the Ice Carnival had been announced by re- lays of public relations counsellors. Leading the show will be the Detroit Olympia Skating Club and its stars, Erice Jaddec and Evelyn Denne, as solo events. Robert Gach, Arcade shutter-snapper, may burlesque the antics of a bewildered photographer who .attempted to cover last year's Carnival. Others on runners will be two skaters from Michigan State Col- lege and Mary Francis Greschke and Betty Courtwright, Ann Arbor figure skating champions. Free Skating From 9:30-11 P.M. The free-skating session will last from 9:30 to 11 p.m., having been lengthened because of the dancing ban. Final entri were announced for the fraternity and sorority skating relays to be heldas part of the pro- gram. Sororities entering are: Alpha Gamma Delta, Alpha Omicrom Pi, Chi Omega, Collegiate Sorosis, I1elta Gamma, Gamma Phi Beta, and Delta Delta Delta. Fraternity teams are: Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Phi Kappa Psi, Phi Psi, Chi Psi, Delta Upsilon and Sigma "Phi Epsilon. Included in the program to be given by the Olympia Club are group and solo numbers. Solos and pairs by Miss Greschke and Miss Courtwright, will also be presented as will waltzes featuring ice figures. Tryouts For Spanish Play Will Be Conducted Friday Final tryouts for the annual Span ish play, "Zaragueta," a "ccmcdy of customs" by Ramos Carrion an1 Vital Aza, will be held at 3 p.m. to- morrow in Room 312 Romance Lan- guage Building. Seven men and four women are needed for the play, which will be held April 1. Any student is eligible to try out, even though he is not studying Spanish at the present time, according to Dr. Charles Staubach, director of the play. O -,c v Y .. '' .. Hairy-armed muscle man, is the University "Silver King." -- Photo by Merriman. Forest Evashevski, football captain and a all-around the successor to Michigan's carnival queens officials of ice carnival announced today. Evashevski will be a Shown with him in the picture above is Mary Francis Greschke, Ann Arbor figure skater. 'Unofficial Editor' Tom Patterson Resigns His Position With Daily 1 If This Isn't Hiccuping Record, What (Hic) Is? -1 Robert McLean, '43, has been tak- ing drugs, standing on his head, drinking water while plugging his ears and denying accusations of drunkenness for 45 hours now, but his hiccups show no sign of stopping. McLean's persistent affliction, which the dictionary defines as a "series of spasmodic inspiratory move- ments," began Tuesday afternoon. Since that time, he said last night in an interview intermingled with ex- QrnIn In s, n i aa ,a a a r t c t r 4 7 S Y C G C By STAN SWINTON When youthful newspapermen re- turn to visit their alma mater, point No. 1 on their itinerary is a trip to the Student Publications Building and Tom Patterson. They come back to see the tall, handsome typesetter because in his five years with The Michigan Daily he has proved himself the amateur journalists' best friend. When head- lines didn't count and the fast-ap- proaching deadline proved too much for the night editor's composure, it was Tom Patterson who saved the situation by writing the headline on the linotype without outside help. When a late story was rushed in sec- onds before the paper was due to go to press, it was Tom Patterson's nimble finger which performed the seemingly impossible and had the story ready in time. Thrt's all over now. Last night Tom Patterson announced he had re- signed his position with The Daily to become vice-president and general manager of the Patterson Brothers printing firm. "There's one last thing I'd like to do for the boys, though," Tom said as he leaned back in his typesetter's chair. "So tell 'em there'll be a keg of beer waiting Friday afternoon." 461 n_ ,____ ,, a nnnra_. llum % T Catholic View Will Be Heard In Faith Series Washington's Rev. Furfey Will Give Second SRA Lecture Saturday Night Presenting the orthodox Catholic viewpoint on the "Existence and Na- ture of Religion," The Rev. Paul H. Furfey, professor of sociology at the Catholic University, Washington, D.C. will deliver the second lecture in the current Student Religious Association series on religioneat 8 p.m. Saturday in the Rackham Lecture Hall. Delivering the belief of the Catholic who is both scientist and clergyman, Father Furfey is one of four noted speakers who are being brought to the Campus by the SRA to discuss the different viewpoints they hold on the question of religion. Father Furfey, who is a Fellow of the American Association for the Ad- vancement f Science and co-director of the Catho. ,University's Center for Research in G ild Development, has been supplied with a copy of Prof. Anton J. Carlson's lecture, which was delivered here last Friday and which attacked religion on the grounds of science. It is expected that his lec- ture will, in part, deal with Profes- sor Carlson's stand. Ruthven' s Ten Years Honored New York Alumni To Fete President At Banquet President Ruthven's 10 years of service as president of the University will be celebrated tomorrow night at the Annual Banquet of the University of Michigan Club of New York, to be held in the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel. Dr .Ruthven himself will be the guest of honor. Representing the University and giving short toasts to Michigan will be Regent Edmund C. Shields, Shirley W. Smith. vice-president and secre- Michigan Team Swims Against Gophers Today Wolverines Have Enough Strength To Take First Place In Every Event By DON WIRTCHAFTER Minnesota's mermen are prepared for the worst today, for they are play- ing hosts to the Michigan superman swimming team in the Gopher tank tonight. Fresh from a record-smashing 70-14 triumph over Michigan' State, Matt Mann has brought 14 of his Western Conference and National Collegiate champions to Minneapolis to extend Michigan's dual meet win streak to seven. To say that Minnesota doesn't stand a chance tonight is putting it mildly. The Wolverines, with the strongest array of talent in Michigan history, can and will win as they please. Even with a record of four wins against two setbacks, Neils Thorpe's aggregation can't be considered a threat to Matt Mann's unblemished record. While Michigan trampled over Iowa, 63-21, the Gopher mermen fell before the same Hawkeye attack, 56-28. Mann left two of'his aces at home, but it won't change the complexion of tonight's affair. Even with Bill Beebe and Strother "T-Bone" Martin out of the Michigan lineup, the Wol- verines still have enough power to win every event. In the diving, Mann has Capt. Hal (Continued on Page 3) Finnish Dancers To Be Featured At Relief Concert Finnish folk dancers wearing au- thentic costumes of Finland will ap- pear in the program of the campus Finnish relief concert to be given Tuesday in Hill Auditorium, Toivo In Four Schools Announcement of students who re- ceived all "A" records in the en- gineering college, the school of busi- ness administration, the pharmacy school, and the graduate school was made by University officials yester- day. Graduate School Students who received perfect rec- ords were: Harold F. Allen, Henry N. Bershas, Jack Bookstein, Jean Brown, Kuo H. Chao, Irving M. Copilowish, Mor- ris Dansky, Joshua Domashevitsky, Kenneth Evashevski, Lawrence J. Giacoletto, Harold M. Helfman, Rob- ert Herzog, George L. Hill. Frederick M. Hoblit, Howard S. Hoyman, Ingeborg V. Kayko, Wm. L. Kichline, Arthur Klein, Chas. A. Ormsby, Chas. E. Rickart, Frank G. Ryder, Fannie L. Shisler, Jean P. Slater, Henry S. Smith, Taft Y. Tori- bara, Donald J. Vink, Bernard Vino- grade, Clyde Vroman, Max A. Wood- bury, Sherman A. Hoslett., College of Engineering Robert R. Allen, Charles B. Arm- strong, Claude O. Broders, Don B. Carson, Jarrett R. Clark, James M Eastman, Frank J. Feely, Jr., Edward A. Gaugler, Allen F. Gilliard, Her-. bert D. Hamilton. Lewis O. Heinze, Harper H. Hull, Herbert L. Misch, Kenneth M. Nel- son, Carl J. Oxford, Earl Schaefer, Bernard Shacter, Cornelius R. Skutt, Frederick B. Sleator, Lewis F. Smith, Charles M. Thatcher, Robert T. Wal- lace. Business Administration Elizabeth Helen Christen, Elinore Evelyn Clark, Douglas A. Hayes. 1 Pharmacy William Lee Austin. 1,400 Persons See Benedict'sx Science Show Demonstration'Of Magict Thrills Large Anidence In Rackham Auditoriumx More than 1,400 students, faculty and townspeople yesterday heard and saw Dr. Francis G. Benedict's combination lecture and magic show in Rackham picture hall. Before his demostration Dr. Benedict contended that there is a basis for a comparison between sci- ence and magic. He said "that magic has shown you truth is much farther from being obvious than you believe." In proving his contention, Dr. Benedict utilized the scientifically impossible technique of regenera- tion. After cutting a dollar bill di- agonally with his so-called magic scissors and marking the serial num- ber on a big white card, he ased two audience representatives to burn it. Handcuffing himself to these two students, he rubbed the ashes delib- eratley, a n d methodically drew out the same dollar bill burned only a few seconds before. Talking of the magician in the lec- ture which was entitled "Science and the Magician," Dr. Benedict pointed out that mystification of the audi- ence might be accomplished by a trick, illusion or magical effect. Trick, he defined as "purely a mechanical or digital procedure involving skill." An illusion, he said, is "a glorified trick made possible by parapherna- lia." As for magical effects, which are the highest art of the magician, he said they are "procedures demon- strating seeming violations of natural laws." Crandall Picks DebateSquad Eight Women To Compete In Contests This Year Eight women who will participate in inter-collegiate women's debate this semester were named yesterday by Mrs. Frederic 0. Crandall, wom- en's debate coach. The negative team which will make the trip to Purdue University March 12 will consist of Barbara Newton, '41, and Janet Grace, '42. The two teams which will meet University of Indiana squads here March 14 and Elizabeth Lightner, '41, and Jane Krause, '41, on the affirmative and 1l47nhgtf1M I .141A ve rlMarv During Soviet Airplane Raid Scandinavia Has Worries As Result Of Violation Of Swedish Neutrality; No Casualties Reported STOCKHOLM, Feb. 21.- () - Swooping Russian planes today bombed and fired the little Swedish border town of Pajala, an incident that threatened to rekindle the fiery Swedish movement for intervention in Finland. Although all of Pajala's 3,000 resi- dents escaped death and the shower of 134 bombs was believed aimed at Finnish territory just six miles away, neutral observers expressed the opin- ion that Swedish "activists" now would reopen their drive to help Fin- land "so vigorously that any other help is unnecessary." 34 Bombs Explosive Townspeople estimated that 34 of the bombs from the heavily laden raiders were explosive, the remaining 100 incendiary. The fact that there were no casulaties was credited to a timely warning .flashed from the border and by the heroic work of a girl telephone operator who stuck at her post. Most of the lethal load was drop- ped in the center of town. Among the demolished buildings were an apartment house and a saw mill from which workers just had time to flee. Bombs rained about a church in which terrorized townsfolk had huddled, shattering many of its windows. Bombers Fly Low The weather was clear and the bombers flew a low as 3,000 feet. The Swedish government ordered its envoy to Moscow, Vilhelm Assar- sson, to make an immediate and vig- orous protest at the Kremlin. Weight was added to the theory that there would be a resurgence of the "activist" movement by the chief of the Swedish Finland committee just back from Finland. He an- nounced tonight that an agreement had been reached with Finland whereby the Swedish committee would intensify the recruiting of Swedish volunteers. Girl Is Hurt In Auto Crash Three Car Accident Resulfs In InjuryOf Detroiter Miss Alice Pettibone, 16 years old, was seriously injured last night in a freak three car accident at the corner of Geddes and Forest while riding in a car driven by Mrs. Dena V. Brezette, 26, wife of Warren E. Brezette, Spec Ed. Miss Pettibone suffered a deep gash across her face requiring numerous stitches and lacerations about the skull. University Hospital officials said last night that her skull was not fractured. Mrs. Brezette was not ser- iously injured.. The accident occurred when Mrs. Brezette's car, travelling west on Geddes, collided with a car driven by Sylvester Eldridge, 35, Negro, who was going north on Forest. The auto- mobiles careened up on to the side- walk on Forest and turned back into the street, ramming a parked car be- longing to Norman Van Cor of New York City. The parked car was only slightly damaged, but the other two were demolished. Miss Pettibone, from Detroit, has been living with the Brezettes in this city at 2014 Geddes. Eldridge resides at 602 Gott. Eldridge was uninjured, according to officials at St. Joseph's Hospital. SRA Inaugurates Oriental Seminars Outlining the philosophy and cus- toms of Hinduism, Mrs. Francesca Thivy, a graduate student from In- dia, inaugurated the first of a series of seminars in Oriental Religions, sponsored by the Student Religious Association, last night at Lane Hall. Designed to furnish information which is not provided by University courses in religions, the seminars will TOM PATTERSON Mich. and a dozen other towns. Throughout the mid-west and west he is famed in printing circles as one of the faset tv npnsetters and haet