Weather Showers and warmer today snow fiurries, colder tomnorrow. 2 1- 4fJ Aar 4hr Ir tgan lait i Editorial A Letter To sabta Clauso VOL. L. No. 66 Z-323 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, DEC. 12, 1939 PRICE FIVE CENTS H ighest Court Rule Outlaws Wire - Tapping For Evidence Clowns Give Children Holiday Spirit Federal' Law For Commnunications Constitutes Basis Reverse Decision Inclusive Language 'Not To Be Limited' WASHINGTON, Dec. 11.-(P)-The Supreme Court ruled today that evi- dence obtained by wire-tapping can- not be used in Federal prosecutions but did not discuss the ethical grounds that formed the basis of famous dis- sents by Justices Holmes and Bran- deis when the practice was upheld in the prohibition era. It dealt solely with interpretation of a law passed since those days- the Federal Communications Act of 1934-which says: "No person not being authorized by the sender shall intercept any communication and divulge or pub- lish the existence, contents, substance, purport, effect or meaning of such in- tercepted communication to any per- son." Government Contention Since the law was designed to regu- late interstate communications, the government contended tha the wire- tapping ban, known as "section 605," applied only to such message and not to telephone calls takingeplace entirely within one state. But the decision, by Justice Rob- erts, held "that the broad and inclu- sive language of the section is not to be limited by construction so as to exclude intrastate communications from the protection against intercep- tion and divulgence." The decision added that since "Congress has power, when necessary for the -protection of interstate com- merce, to regulate intrastate trans- actions, there is no constitutional re- quirement that the scope of the statute be limited so as to exclude intrastate communications." New 'Yorkers Involved The decision was rendered in a case involving three New Yorkers-Joseph J. Weiss, a lawyer; Martin Gross, an investigator; and Dr. Maximilian Goldstein, physician-who were con- victed with others of using the mails to defraud insurance companies. For several months postal inspectors had their telephone wires tapped, record- ing the conversations. The Supreme Court held interstate wire-tapping illegal in 1937 in a case involving three other New Yorkers- Frank Carmine Nardone, Nathan W. Hoffman and Robert Gottfried-who were convicted of smuggling alcohol. Koussevitzky's 110 Musicians To Play Here Dr. Serge Koussevitzky and the 110 musciians who make up the Boston Symphony Orchestra will give the sixth Choral Union concert before a capacity audience at 9:30 p.m. Thurs- day in Hill Auditorium, Dr. Charles A. Sink, president of the University Musical Society, predicted yesterday.- Tickets for the concert, which marks the ninth successive appear- ance of the orchestra here, may be obtained Thursday at the School of Music office and at Hill Auditorium. A typical Koussevitzky program, combining the old and the new, will be offered, featuring an interpretation of Mozart's "Symphony in C major." On the modern side, Dr. Koussevitzky has selected Roy Harris' "Symphony No. 3." This composition, written by an American, has never been played before in Ann Arbor. "Peter and the Wolf," an orchestral fairy tale for children, by Prokofieff, with Richard Hale as narrator, and orchestral fragments from "Daphnis et Chloe, Second Suite" by Ravel will complete the program. These frag- ments will include "Lever du Jour," "Pamtomime" and "Danse Generals." New Year Revelers May Get Late Drinks LANSING, Dec. 11.-(l)-The Liq- uor Control Commission said today it was firm in its resolution to forbid New Year's Eve sale of hard liquor, but that it might permit a couple of -Daily Photo by Bogle Millions of kids, watchful parents, and best of all, clowns, mingled in yesterday's Interfraternity Council party to watch and participate in the afternoon's entertainment. Dick Strain (behind the makeup) carries an especially small one on his shoulders. Inter fraternity Council Party Attracts 5,000 Ann Arbor Kids By WILLIAM ELMER More than 5,000 Ann Arbor school kids had the time of their life at the Interfraternity Council's second an- nual Christmas Party yesterday, if cries of "Hooray, gee, but it's swell," and wild applause at every turn in the program mean anything. From the time the kids entered gaily-bedecked Hill Auditorium and put on festive party hats, until the time they left, each receiving a bag of candy, apples and peanuts, the party was literally a howling suc- cess. Louis Hollway, physical direc- tor for Ann Arbor public schools, acting as master of ceremonies, wel- comed everybody. Then, a mob of fraternity men, dressed as clowns, took over the show. They raced up and down the aisles, drawing peals England Loses Sx More Ships In Sea Warfare Mine Sweeper And Five Merchantmen Declared Lost In Official Report LONDON, Dec. I1.-(IP)-Six morel British ships were added today to the ever-growing list of allied vessels lost in sea warfare. Among the British ships lost were four missing merchantmen, long over- due, which the British believed sunk. These were the Ash Lea, 4,222 tons; Newton Breech, 4,651 tons; Trevan- ton, 5,299 tons; and the Huntsman, 8,196 tons. A fifth merchant vessel, the 4,815- ton Willowpool, went down after hit- ting a mine. Her crew of 36 was rescued by lifeboat. The mine- sweeper Ray of Hope, a vessel that had been requisitioned by the navy for auxiliary duties, also met disas- ter in the form of a mine. Four of her crew were killed, five were miss- ing and three rescued. The Ray of Hope, eleventh British naval vessel lost since the outbreak of war, was not listed in naval regis- ters. The Admiralty did not give her tonnage. (From the German High Command in Berlin came the announcement that two British tankers, tonnage to- taling 18,000, had been sunk in the British Channel. They were not. identified). of laughter from the crowd every- time they passed. To accomplish the near-impossible feat of getting a mirthful, tousle- headed audience to sing, Prof. David Mattern of the School of Music and director of the Varsity Glee Club, called forth from the stage, "Let's' all sing 'Hark, the Herald Angels Sing'." And they did. The Ann Arbor High School Band supplied the music and the Glee Club sang, al- though neither could be heard. Mayor Walter C. Sadler, of the en- gineering school,had just been in- troduced, when the Band suddenly broke into "Jingle Bells" and who should pop in the door but jolly old St. Nick himself. There was no stopping the uproar then. But who cared? After a few words, Santa took his place on the stage and the Michigan Tumbling Team put on a thrilling act. Two of the boys, dressed as clowns, did much to tickle the humor of the already uproarious crowd. The kids were still cheering when the house lights dimmed and the familiar face of Mickey Mouse ap- peared on a special screen above the stage. Immediately the crowd simul- taneously gave forth one long yell of delight and then settled down to five minutes of comparative quiet, broken often by laughter. Mr. Hollway then bade everybody a Merry Christmas and the kids streamed out the front doors uhore they all got a cellophane ba- c, candy and other delicacies. Daily Reaches Peak In Sales Goodfellow Drive Total May Exceed_$1,100 The Goodfellow Army raised more than $700 in street sales during yes- terday's one-day campaign by The Daily to raise funds for needy stu- dents and Ann Arbor families. Final returns, together with con- tributions from private individuals and receipts from advertising includ- ed in the special Goodfellow Daily, are expected to swell the total to a sum of more than $1,100, an unex- pected high, according to Dennis Flanagan, '40, editor of the spscial issue. Congress led all other organizations in amassing the greatest sum in street sales. Tau Beta Pi and the Woman's Athletic Association jointly and then the Union followed in close order. Eitht To Vie In Business School Vote Seniors To Pick Officers; Frosl And Senior Dance Groups To Be Chosen Judiciary Council Reviews Petition Candidates for tomorrow's senior business administration school elec- tion were announced yesterday by Carl Wheeler, '40E, head of the Men's Judiciary Council, after that body had considered petitions yesterday. Candidates for Frosh Frolic and Sen- ior Ball dance committee elections, also to be held tomorrow, will be an-' mnounced tomorrow following the judgment of women's petitions, today. Business schoo candidates for presidency of the senior class are: Richard Sievers, and Howard Teitle- baum. For secretary, the candidates' are Fritz Lietchy and Phyllis Bennett. Treasurer's position will be contested by Arthur Bartholomew and Doug- las Hayes, and for the position of vice- president, Julius Mellema and Jack MacLeod. The business school elec- tion will allow one vote per posi- tion, while the dance elections will permit only one vote ,per person. Balloting for the senior business school election will be held from 10 a.m. to 12, noon tomorrow in Room 205 Tappan Hall. Elections for the two dance committees in the literary college will be held from 2 to 5 p.m. in Room 225 Angell Hall. This time was previously announced as 1 to 5 p.m. In the engineering school, the elec- tion will run from 2 to 5:30 p.m. at a place to be announced later; in the school of architecture, from 3 to 5 p.m. in the downstairs lobby of the architecture building; in the school of education, from 3 to 5 p.m. in Room 2431 of the elementary school. Elections in the forestry school will be held 3 to 5 p.m. in the forestry seminar and for the School of Music, from 3 to 5 p.m. in the downstairs lobby of the carillon. Drive To Help Finland Begins Suomi Club's Campaign Centers At Lane Hall C-ntributions have started to pour in o the Lane Hall headquarters of the, campus drive to aid Finland, Toi- yvo Liimatainen, '41, president of Suo- mi Club, organization of students of Finnish extraction, announced last night. The drive, which is headed by Wil- iam E. Bilto, Grad, will extend throughout the week. Clothing and money are needed, Liimatainen said, for the relief of Finland, now at war with Russia. Peter Kivi, of Ann Arbor, has vol- unteered the services of a truck to transport clothing collected to the Detroit headquarters of the drive, which is national in scope. The Lane Hall headquarters will be open throughout the day, and stu- Prof. Pawlowski Claims New Plates Ruin Streamlining LANSING, Dec. 11. -(A)- Secre- tary of State Harry F. Kelly, him- self a Republican, told Prof. F. W. Pawlowski, University of Michigan aeronautical engineer, in effect to- night that if motorists of the state pay an additional $1,000,000 a year to push the larger 1940 automobile license plates through the breeze it's the Democrats' fault. The size of the 1940 plates was determined long before last Novem- ber's election, and dies for the new plates were completed in August, 1938, Kelly explained. The dies cost $6,343 and new bake ovens for the larger plate an additional $2,300, the secretary added, so there could be no question of any change in size after he took office last January. Griffin Will Speak To SigmaRho Tau Dean Clara E. Grif;m- of the busi- ness administration school will ad- dress Sigma Rho Tau, honorary en- Engineers Plan 'Spoofuncup' Party Tonight Six professors of the College of Engineering are looking forward to 6:30 p.m. tomorrow with perhaps a little dismay. At that time the Spoo- fun Cup, emblem of success in being able to "take it" from all the stu- dents and professors of the engineer- ing school who will attend the annual American Society of Mechanical En- gineers Roast, will be awarded. The Spoofun cup is a tin funnel standing on an inverted tin cup with a tin spoon on both sides. For this reward, six professors must submit themselves to a heated series of ques - tions asked by this year's Master of the Roast, Prof. E. L. Erikson, chair- man of Engineering Mechanics, which are designed to test their wit, inge- nuity and sense of humor, while be- seiged by a cross-fire of good-natured heckling and banter from the on- lookers. The professor. deemed best able "to take it" is then awarded the Spoofuncup, which he is entitled to keep in his possession for the ensuing year. a The professors selected to be "roast- ed" at this year's banquet are: Prof. R. S. Hawley, acting head of me- chanical engineering, Prof. C. W. Spooner, of the Department of Me- chanical Engineering, Prof. H. L. Kohler, of the automotive engineering department, Prof. A. D. Moore, of the electrical engineering department; Prof. A. F. Parker, of the metal pro- cessing department, and Prof. J. Or- mondroyd, of the engineering me- chanics department. Ruthven Plans University Tax Question Probe President And City Council Will Discuss Charges In Conference Soon1 President Ruthven and members of the Ann Arbor city council will meet together "sometime this week" to discuss charges by the city that the University has not assumed its full share of taxes and assessments.1 Announcement of the conference, exact date of which is not set, was made yesterday by President Ruth- ven, who has been negotiating thisf week with Council Chairman Leigh J. Young. g President Ruthven, Mayor Walter C. Sadler, Mr. Young and other members of the council will partici- pate as a committee-of-the-whole in, the discussions in the University offices. According to President Ruthven, the conference was called by him to determine "just what are the issues involved." "I hope that out of this confer-1 ence we can discover if there are any real points of difference when the facts are actually known," he explained. Nilsson Will Give University Lecture Dr. Martin P. Nilsson, professor of classical archaeology and ancient history at the University of Lund, Sweden, will give a University Lec- ture at 4:15 p.m. today in the Rack- ham Amphitheatre. His talk on "Rural Customs and Rural Festivals in Greek Religion" will be illustrated. It is sponsored by the Greek department. Dr. Nilsson was formerly the rec- tor of the University of Lund. He has, according to Prof. Campbell Bonner of the Greek department," a very high standing as a leading authority on ancient religions, es- pecially the Greek." Dr. Nilsson speaks English fluent- ly and has written several books in that language. H. V. Kaltenborn To 'Edit News" In Talk Tonight H. V. KALTENBORN Advancing Soviets Combat Stubborn Finnish Resistance* The crisp, professorial voice of H. V. Kaltenborn, ace news analyst, will again be heard when he "edits the news" in the style which brought him into international prominence, in the fourth Oratorical Association lecture at 8:15 p.m. today in Hill Auditorium. Awarded the Headliner's Club gold plaque for his cover of the Spanish civil war in1936, when he crouched for nine hours in a bullet-pierced haystack until trans-Atlantic con- nections were made, and then pro- ceeded to describe the conflict for the CBS audience during the roar of artillery fire, Kaltenborn is ac- claimed as "dean of news commen- tators." Before the mike, he is described as "completely at ease, talking freely without a script and with only occa- sional refernce to his handful of notes. His gestures, like his voice, are quick and emphatic, not nervous but rather signs of a quick-acting mind which goes at once to the heart of the subject." News broadcasting became a Kal- tenborn specialty in 1922, and for 16 years, his program was popular, but not spectacular. Not until he reached 60 did the full value of his wide ex- perience in newspaper work come in- to great prominence. Then, the Sep- tember crisis of 1938 so completely dominated his life that he was forced to live in the broadcasting studios during the entire period. Bridge Tourney PlansCompleted Arrangements are complete for the All-Campus. Bridge Tourney, to be held .at 7:15 p.m. today in Union Ballroom, according to Irl Brent, '41, chairman of the event. The All Campus event is one of three held during the Union's winter bridge tournament. The winners of each individual meet are awarded free dance passes to the Union, and the average high point team for the three contests is awarded the all campus trophy. Registrations will be taken at the main desk, and must be made by 5 p.m. Russians Push Westward On North Front In Drive Toward Swedish Border Natural Obstacles Bar USSR Army By LYNN HEINZERLING HELSINKI, Dec. 11. -(A P- In heavy fighting today along the entire Finnish battlefront, Russian troops reached points from 40 to 60 miles from the border in some places but, a Finnish communique said, at a cost of many casualties. The Finns reported three com- panies of Russians wiped out in one surprise machinegun attack, and counterattacks by fast-flying Fin- nish ski detachments. The Russian advances, represent- ing aggregate gains in 12 days of fighting with sharpshooting Finnish ski units along the snowy eastern frontier, were mainly in two sec- tors-just north of Lake Ladoga and several hundred miles farther north near Kuolojarvia, which the Rus- sians took yesterday. Russians Burn Town Their drive near Kuolojarvia car- ried today to Salla. just above the Arctic Circle and 40 miles in from the . border. Finnish troops with- drew from Salla and the Russians promptly burned the town. The Red armed force pushing westward in this sector evidently in- tends to rend Finland by advancing to the Swedish border. Following one of the few roads traversing this area, the Russians at Salla were approxi- mately one fifth of the way to the Swedish frontier. Finnish troops were withdrawing slowly into the forests, where they can provide much rougher going for the Russians than on the snowy but open terrain east of Salla. Along the icy northern shore of Lake Ladoga, where a strong Russian force has undertaken a wide flank- ing maneuver around the fortified Karelian Isthmus, a Finnish com- munique told of Finnish troops with- drawing from Pitkaranta, railroad terminal about 60 miles from the frontier, after fierce fighting. Air Force Active The Russian air force actively sup- ported the land offensive but no de- tails of its operations were men- tioned. The town of Loimola, on a spur railroad north of Ptkarant, was heavily bombarded, evidently in preparation for attack as the Rus- sians advanced along the lakeshore. Several Russian attacks were re- pulsed with heavy losses at the tour- ist resort of Tolvajarvi, about 50 miles north of Ladoga. Still farther north in the rocky, lake-studded Ilomantsi sector, near the industrial town of Enso, the Fin- nish command announced it had wiped out three companies of Rus- sian infantry with surprise machine gun attacks. The Russians were caught in cross fire. At Suomussalmy the Russians also lost many men, according to the Finns. Foreign Neutral Observers Point Out Obstacles MOSCOW, Dec. 11.-(P)-Evidence that Soviet Russian troops were meeting heavy natural obstacles in Finland in addition to the stubborn resistance of the Finns was seen to- day by foreign neutral observers. These sources said the Russians apparently realized now their mis- take of trying to effect a mechanized advance over lakes and through rocky and wooded terrain in their drive to cut in from the east and then attack the Mannerheim Line from the rear. The opinion was expressed that the Russians would advance faster as soon as they used cavalry and in- fantry more extensively. Gaping Holes Detain 'Perspectives' Issue Everything is set for the third issue of Perspectives, campus literary mag- azine, to go to press, but in the middle of two of the page make-ups there are gaping holes where engravings should be. Crippled Children's Aid Group Plans Parley Here Next Month Delegates of the organizations on the State Committee to Aid Crippled Children together with all other in- terested groups, will meet at a state- wide conference Friday, Jan. 19,3i Ann Arbor, to decide upon a uni- form policy of action, according to Harry Stutz, Grad., secretary of the State Committee. The date for the Conference has been changed from Dec. 15 to Jan. 19, at the request of many groups throughout the state for more time to discuss the resolution for a special session of the legislature and to cir- eventually become emergency cases if no hospital care is given them, he said. Testimony given last week in the Governor's office points to the fact that the present reduced appropria- tion is sufficient to cover only the actual "life or death" cases, Stutz said, and since most crippled chil- dren's cases are sub-acute, it. is nec- essary that they, too receive correc- tive treatment. It is for the purpose of treatment for this category of "sub-acute" cases to prevent permanent deformity that the Committee is demanding a spe- Immediate Financial Collapse Unlikely In Japan, Hayden Says By HOWARD A. GOLDMAN Japan's new and larger war bud- get, although it shows obvious signs of fiscal strain, does not indicate the approach of an acute financial crisis in Japan. This budget, moreover, is only an- other sign that Japan's financial position is deteriorating. These were views expressed by plained, but the saving factor in this situation is that a large propor- tion of this debt is held inside Japan. Of course this means that the Jap- anese government will find increas- ing difficulty in floating domestic loans; Professor Hayden commented, and even now it cannot borrow- abroad. In the long run, he observed, the