Weather movers, cooler in west portions today; to- trtly cloudy. L .L Sir Ab Official Publication Of The Summer Session E CENTS ;3 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 26, 1935 PRICE: FIV 'E CENTS ;66mz;; - ernational Law rley Will Open etingS Tonight Teachers Will Meet e For Fourth Annual ference t, Reeves To ddress Members es Begin Tomorrow 'ning; Hyde, Wilson, Ah Also On Staff 1 exercises opening the fourth summer Sessjon on Teaching onal Law will be held at 8 light. The membership of on includes forty .teachers of onal law and international from universities and col- oughout the country. red by the Carnegie Endow- International Peace, the con- s conducted here anually to achers of international law unity to contact and receive on from recognized author- his field.-; mes Brown, director of the of international law of the Endowment for Interna- ace, and Prgf. Jesse S. Reeves aiversity political science de- b, both of whom are members eaching staff of the session, ress the opening meeting of p. udents in the session will be r the five-week period at the elta Phi fraternity house, 556 ate St. 3urses Begin Thursday s dealing with the various f international law will begin v morning. Plans provide Dean Of Law Parley Prof. Jesse S. Reeves of the Uni- versity political science department, who will again serve as dean of the annual Summer Session on Teach- ing International Law. The parley opens here today and will continue until July 30. Senators Whip Rowe, 7 To 4, In Final Game Goslin Has Perfect Day At Bat As He Hits Safely In 13 i Straight Game DETROIT, June 25 - (Special) - The Washington Senators won the final game of the series from the De- troit Tigers today, 7 to 4, when they batted Lynwood "Schoolboy" Rowe from the box after five innings. The series went to Detroit, however, as the Tigers had previously won three. Nearly 4000 Enrolled For Studies Here Incomplete Figures Show 3,746 Students Are In 1935 Summer Session Hopkins Predicts A Record Registration Visible Gains Recorded Over Last Smmer In All Schools,_Colleges With 3,746 students enrolled in the Summer Session at 5 p.m. yesterday, the probability that the total enroll-1 ment would surpass 4,000 appeared a certainty. Prof. Louis A. Hopkins, director of the Summer Session, stated that he1 expects the 1935 term to be the largest since 1931, when g record high en- rollment of 4,328 was registered. If the total for this year reaches 4.000 when final compilations are made by the office of the registrar, it will be only the second time in the 42 years of the Summer Session's history that this figure has been reached, Enrollment continued to run far ahead of the 1934 mark again yester- day. At this date last yea 2,928 students had registered, 818 less than were recorded yesterday.. The 1934 total enrollment of 3,272 had already been passed with Monday's total of 3,519. Perceptible gains were again shown yesterday in registration in the liter-, ary college, the College of Engineer- ing, the Medical School, the Law School, the Graduate School, the School of Music, the College of Ar- chitecture, the School of Education, the School of Business Administra- tion, and the School of Forestry andj Conservation. Of the 3,746 enrolled in the Uni- versity to date, figures showed that 2,376 of this number were men as p wd .70 T . of618 studie its ove last year in- cluded 471 men and 347 women. Educators Plan Meetings Today Extracurricular activity in the School of Education gets under way in earnest today, with an afternoon con- ference, two club organization meet- ings, and an honorary society organi- zation meeting scheduled. Calvin O. Davis, professor of sec- ondary education and secretary of the School of Education, will address the first afternoon conference at 4:10 p. m. in Room 1022 University High School. Professor Davis will discuss "The Tercentenary Celebration and its Results." Those interested in the formation of a Women's Education Club will meet with Miss Gertrude Muxen and Dr. Mabel Rugen at 7:15 p. m. in the Michigan League. A garden party is planned. Men will meet for the or- ganization of thir club with Prof. Jackson R. Sharman at 7:30 p. m. in the Union. Pi Lambda Theta will hold its or- ganization meeting at 8:15 p.m. in the Michigan League. Prof. Cleo Murt- land will preside. Louis Batters Carnera F o r Win In Sixthb Technical Knockout Given Sensational Negro After Three Knockdowns Amazing Crowd Of 70,000 Sees Fight Is Largest Throng Since 1930; Louis Pounds Big Italian From Start YANKEE STADIUM, NEW YORK, June 25.-- (RP) - Joe Louis, sensa- tional Negro from Detroit, scored a technical knockout over Primo Car- nera, former heavyweight champion, in two minutes, twenty-two seconds of. the sixth round of a fifteen round battle tonight before a crowd esti- mated at the amazing total of 70,- 000. Carnera, badly battered all the way and bleeding freely from the mouth after the first round, went down twice for a count of four in the sixth before Louis flattened him for the third time with a left hook to the chin. Carnera rose then at three, so dazed that he turned helplessly to the ref- eree, Arthur Donovan, unable to con- tinue. Donovan immediately stepped in and stopped the slaughter, award- ing Louis a technical knockout. Louis' punching was amazingly powerful as he drilled the man who outweighed him by 64/ pounds. Car- nera scaled 260%, Louis 196. The gate receipts were estimated at close to $500,000. The size of the crowd, greatest since Max Schmeling won the heavyweight title from Jack Sharkey before 79,- 222 persons in this same ring on a foul in 1930, witnessed with astonish- ment the merciless exhibition of the brown boy who fought his first pro- fessional fight only a year ago. idmked-n otytih en ii the '22 ffghts he has had as a professional, but had little trouble cutting Carnera down as an expert woodman with a two-edged axe would fell a monster oak in a forest. - Shuffling forward, Louis lashed out suddenly at the start of the first round with a left hook that nearly tore away the lower half of Carnera's head. The giant, all waving arms and strumbling legs when he is hurt, fought desper- ately to grab the youngster, lean on him, batter him in the clinches. Joe just moved away and then back, to swing a long right into Pri- mo's mouth that tore the lip and started blood flowing, then to nail him again with a right that sent ripples of startled reaction from muscles all over Carnera's bulgy frame. MRS. MOODY WINS LONDON, June 25. -(RP) -Helen Wills Moody began her campaign to regain the all-English tennis cham- pionship today by eliminating M. Baumgarten of Hungary, 6-0, 6-1, in a first round match on Wimbledon's famous courts. Helen Jacobs, the American cham- pion and old rival of Mrs. Moody's, also advanced into the second round in easy style, whipping Nelli Adamson, Belgian champion, 6-3, 6-2. In Tie For Medal Honors is scheduled to con- Golf Team Keeps College Title With MalloY Kocsis Each of the members of the teach- faculty of five will direct one or re of the courses. The personnel this council, as announced last ;ht, includes Dr. Scott as chairman, ofessor Reeves as dean, George A. ich, managing editor of the Amer- ,n Journal of International Law, as retary. Prof. Charles Cheney Hyde, Ham- on Fish Professor of International w at Columbia University, and Prof. orge Grafton Wilson, professor of ernational law at Harvard Uni- sity, complete the membership of e eaching staff. Wilson Opens Series the program of the session includes, addition to the courses, group con- ences and evening lectures, as well a limited number of consultation riods. The lectures are the only rtion of the session to which the blic is admitted. Professor Wilson will open the ser- of five lectures at 8 p. m. Monday Room 1025. Angell Hall when he eaks on "The Treaty of Versailles .d International Law." Other mem-' rs of the council will speak on suc- eding Monday nights throughout ee session. The second lecture will be given by ofessor Reeves, who will speak on nternational Boundaries."dA speech i"The Tragedy of Words in In- rnational Law" by Professor Hyde 11 be presented the fd-Howing week. "The United States and the De- lopment of the European Situation" 11 be the subject of Mr. Finch in e fourth lecture. The last in the ries will be delivered by Dr. Scott 1 July 29. His subject will be "Sanc- mns of International Law." Prof. Aiton To Deliver Third Talk In Series Noted Authority Will Tell Of Current Problems In Hispanic America The third of the series of University lectures for the Summer Session will be given today by Prof. Arthur S. Ai- ton of the History Department. He will speak on "Current Problems in Hispanic America" at 5 p.m. in Na- tural Science Auditorium. Professor Aiton is a recognized au- thority on Hispanic-American affairs, having served on the board of editors of the Hispanic-American Historical Review and as a member of the com- mission on Research in Latin-Amer- ican Relations. He has been a fre- quent contributor to periodicals and reviews on the subject of Hispanic- American affairs and history, and % the author of "Antonio de Mendoza, First Viceroy of New Spain. Coming to the University of Mich- igan as instructor in history in 1921, Professor Aiton has been professor of Hispanic-American history since 1929. His early training was received at the University of California, fol- lowed by study as a traveling fellow in. Spain, 1920-21, and graduate study at the University of Caen, France, in 1919. Professor Aiton has served as fel- low in National Social Science Re- search, France and Spain, 1928-29, and as a membe of tbeactyof thff s r'choos of'thr thiVerityN of California, 1926 and 1930, and of the University of Chicago, 1927. Britain Invites T h. r e e Powers To Naval Talk Russia, France, And Italy Asked, But Acceptances Are Not Certain LONDON, June 25.-MP) - Great Britain, with Germany's promise never again to engage in unrestricted submarine warfare in her possession, today made ready to discuss naval issues with France, Italy and Russia. Prime Minister Stanley Baldwin in- formed the House .of Commons that the three had been invited to send delegations to London, but dodged questions as to whether the invitations had been accepted. A short time before, Sir Bolton Eyres-Monsell, first lord of the ad- miralty, stirred the legislators to cheers with the announcement that the Reich had given her pledge to ad- here to the rules and regulations re- garding submarine warfare in part four of the Washington Treaty re- gardless of other powers. Some caustic comment followed Sir Bolton's address. Aneurin Bevan, La- bor party member, asked whether any warring nation on the vem'ge of defeat would abide by the treaty provisions if that meant losing the war. "That would be the policy of de- spair," Sir Bolton retorted while the House cheered. "That would mean a return to jungle war." TWO FLYING CADETS KILLED SELFRIDGE FIELD, June 25 - (P) -Flying Cadets Willis M. Darnell, 22 years old, and Robert C. Streater, 24, were killed today when in pursuit planes they were flying in formation with 16 other ships of the Ninety- Sixth Pursuit Squadron locked wings and crashed into a marsh. g ames. k A young left-hander, Leon Pettit, kept the Tigers effectively at bay for the eight innings he worked before giving way to Jack Russell. His mates gave him an early lead, when they got three runs in the third. They followed in up with four more in the fifth, driving Rowe out of the game. The brightest spot in an otherwise unsatisfactory day for Detroit was the fine hitting of Goose Goslin, who got a double and three singles in four times at bat. He has hit safely in thirteen consecutive games - every one since he returned to the linup. Johnny Stone and Fred Schulte carried the brunt of the Senator at- tack. Stone drove in three runs with a triple and two singles, while Schulte's home run in the fifth scored' Travis ahead of him. Auker relieved Rowe in the sixth and, when Reiber batted for him in the seventh, was replaced by Hog- sett. The Senators failed to score off either of the Tiger relief pitchers. Detroit remained five games out of first place as Cleveland defeated New York. The Tigers open a series at Chicago tomorrow. Infection Was A Malign Spirit In His Body To The Algonquin Alaskan Settlers' To Teach Courses Dr. Scott wil teach two courses in- uiding The Classics of Internation- Law before Grotius and Classic ojects of International Law Organ- ation. Professor Reeves will discuss he Classics of International Law om Grotius to Vattel and Political hieory and International Law. Territorial Waters, Neutrality, and iternational Law and the Constitu- :n will be the subjects of the three urses tought by Professor Wilson. ofessoi Hyde will discuss Interpre- tion of International Law by the upreme Court of the United States. r. Finch will have as his subject he Modern Sources of Interna- onal Law. The Members of the council will irpn am rfppnnapnt ra anr 'Silly'4" C- omplaints Roundly Attacked WASHINGTON, June 25.-P) - Indignantly, Anthony J. Dimond, Alaska's delegate to Congress denies Matanuska valley is a "dusty, mos- quito-infested" country-as described by returning California transient workers. Dimond also termed 'grossly ex- aggerated" and "silly" complaints of settlers in the government's coloniza- tion project against its management. These pioneers went to Alaska from drouth areas of Wisconsin, Minnesota and Michigan. Pointing out that he had repeatedly warned the settlers should be care- fully selected and impressed with the faoft that thev uwrr nnt being led into By ELSIE A. PIERCE The medical theories and practices of the Algonquin Indians of the Great Lakes region were the subject of the second lecture in the Summer Session series, delivered by Dr. Wilbert M. Hinsdale, professor-emeritus of the Medical School, yesterday in the Nat- ural Science auditorium. In differentiating between the mod- ern and primitive conception of med- icine, Dr. Hinsdale said that we speak of infection as the cause of illness, while the Indian though of it as an invasion or possession of his body by a malignspirit and whatever acted against it was medicine, whether something to swallow, a ritual, pray- er or a protective enchantment. "Among people in the lower cul- tures," he said, "medicine is insep- arably associated with religion, if re- ligion includes the conception of im- material forces supposed to permeate all things." Dr. Hinsdale stated that there are two sources of information about the practices of the Algonquin Indians residing in the Great Lakes area, one of the writings of the first explorers and missionaries and the other the pure archaeological evidence. How- ever, the value of the first source is somewhat impaired, he pointed out, because "the early writers described, so far as thy comprehended, things as they found them, but they fre- quently misunderstood the full pur- port of what they described." The commoner minor was treated by a simple dose, he said, and al- most every root;-bark and plant were used for such purposes, although the use of such remedies has long since passed into historic pharmocology. "The Indians' contribution to the stock of white men's drugs was quite voluminous for 200 years," Dr. Hins- dale stated, "but excepting a few barks and roots from South America, the others are mere markers along r w r Open Registration For Memberships In Union Registration for Summer Ses- sion memberships in the Union will continue for the remainder of the week at the main desk in the lobby of the Union, it was an- nounced last, night by Stanley G.