DEDICATED TO JUSTICE AV Al :43 at Ix MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS VOL XXXV. No. 87 EIGHT PAGES ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TI ISDAlY, JANUAR 20, 1925 EIGHT PAGES PRICE, rIVE CENTrI TWO-CENT GAS TAX' SURE TO WIN, POLL11 PROPONENTS OF A TWOOI)-BAXTE R BILL4 SAY MEASURE WILL PASS 11PPER lHOUSE ONLY FEW DISSENTj Lower House Expected To Consider ! Proposition Byf Wednesday Lansing, Jan. 19. (By A. P.)-Pro-f portents of the Atwood Baxter bill providing for a two-cent tax on gaso- line declared today that a poll of inembers of the Senate indicated that the measure would pass the Senate by a large majority when It comes up for consideration. But three or four Sena- tors have expressed disapproval on the measures they stated, and it is ! expected that the bill will reach thej! house by Wednesday. Though it is claimed opponents of the gasoline{ tax would not attempt a referendum on a one-cent levy, their stand on :aI two-cent tax is still in doubt. The two-cent bill in the Senate has been approved by the attorney general's deC- partment in respect to its cons titu- tionality. A claimed error of $600,000,000 in the estimated total weight of the automo- hules of the state was discussed by op-, pontents of the weight tax mieasure and it Js expected th~e committee on roads' and bridges in the House, which nowIi has the Evan's weight tax bill underA E N. A. C. SEEKS TO BECOMXE IMICHI(.EAN STATE CO)LLEG~Ej lbansing, Jan. 19. (By A. P.)- A pmeasure 'proposing that the name of Michigan Agricultural jcollege be changed to Michigan S State college, is to be offered the Ilegislature. Rep. A. C. 'McKinnl of Bay City, is expected to on sor the suggestion.t For a number of years the col- Ilege- alumni association and I others have been agitating clang- ing the title of thle college. It Iis understood them, has been some disagreement among thej graduates, some of the farmers 4 prefering to leave thle name un- altered. Proponents of the plan claim that because of the (liver- (sied courses now offered at thef college the namne Agri]cultural college does not adeluat ely des-! cribe the school. ClallIs Presenut "Feuudeneces Out griwl h Of -Danger From LVueI Faine "FEARS UNFOUN DE.D" Characterizing the origin of ]Europ- ean forestry as an outgrowth of a, "fear of a fuel famine and not from the wisdom of monarchs," Dr. C. A. Schenck, tormier Mead and founder of 188 lECO NUILABLES ASK PARIS PACT UUIZ IN SENATE DIRECT DESTINY OF 1926 JUNIOR HOP t f 3 i r: t . i' I f f t { { i . , i i { , ,< 1 ff f' 4 i Ii i it I 4t.IY +,'. ITON ACTS TO1)QUI ET F! 'IEA 4) 0G i,1 REPARATIIONS A (t ItE E~i ENI' SEE COMPLICATIONSI I Ii zgiles I ssues Fcrila1 'Statenment; Says, Plan 1Places U. S. Under .N,') 0lga ion Wa: hingtcea-, Join. 1 9.---(.By A. P.)-f thezc adiainist ra on tooks steps today to allay apprehension as to the effectjX of the Paris reparations agreement, b)ut ~thuate irrconlcilable:: on the Ver- sailles treaty made it clear that an in- iquiry into Ithe Awhole subject would lhe Iro:e. c tavf i~le nafr mnal stat^A ent is~n ued with White i-Louso approval c(clared the agree- ment put the U. S. "'under no obliga- t ion legally or morally," with respect j o the cnforeernent of reparations pay-r meni~ sand tha t it.nether "surrendersa or mnodifies" aniy treaty r'ighlt of the tiiaitcd Sttes l Thirteen inen for'm lie eflim itt Wilei hcre appeared to b.! every jl(i h vnn f'e.( ie desire, of tih' state depart ment to re- pa ~( 'eln fFb .Te hardl the Paris in gotiations a7 a closed ,Ihl)1)iird, '26M, IHarry Koenig, '26, I inc'idenit, Chairmmi Boirah of the Sen- Charleb G(aian, '26, general chairn; ate for eig~n rIlion: >comm ittee and ' '261), Clayton Purdy, '26L, Burton G t;(nator ,Jolhnlson assertedI that Mr. - fi glI es' ste tern en stewas in dIirect con- Ilict with the views ex pressed by for-t e'gn statesmen. ' IN T I Senator Johnson, whzo is author o the resolution galling for a copy of g the agreement now enraul e here from rigiht and the foreign statesmen wrong_____ as to wheother the agreement did in 61~it '1 Jeaih lcr fact draw; the IU. S. into European en- , Dliyiito Ilines on c11iyTbom tanglements. .auiy2 MICHIGAN STOP 1 O T S 911W OLVERINES T~AE EARLY LEA; WACKMAN STARS FOR VISITORS DEFENSE IS STRONG Haggerty Scores Tivo Field Goals; Ilutzel, Doyle and Cherry Each Get One te which is directing the Junior Hop of t ire as follows, reading left to right; Topr Thubert Goebel, '26E; Center row: Henry in, J. I). Darling, '28A, Edgar J. Reilly, roff, '2G1P, Charles Grube, '26. 1 A BIG~ TEN STANIiNG I, I, I, t "~ " ''~"2"the Baltimore forest school at P'alti- the tax rates. The Evan's bill, as in-', troducedl, names a weight tax rate of more, South Carolina, and one of the 65 cents per hundredweight, it is ex-' prime movers in the instigation of petted, but many house members favor ;forestry in this country, spoke yester- to cut it 5 or 55 cents.; day afternoon in the Natural ScienceI __________ auditorium on "Present 'Tendencies in 11 luropean Forestry." Professors Bere All central Europe early established a system of forestry Dr. Schenck stat- .Severely Lashed 'Ed, while a maritime nation as Eng- r land, not dependent on a home supply In R centLettr of wood fuel, had little need of forest- ration. The policy early adopted in Professors are not held in the high- j this country was that of deatroyingm R} est esteem by persons outside of uni- as much of the forests as was possible, versity circles, if letters which are as a great impediment to civilization.; received by different departments of+ Refuting the argument advanced byl the University may be used in pas- many as to the future wood supply sing judgment. A communication after the American supply has been which has just been received by theI exhausted, thje speaker said, "foreign geology department carries with' it; countries will supply us. It is tiue which are received by different de- that there is timber in Siberia and the particular condemnation. } tropics, but it couild only be gotten Recently some material was recev- ; out at such a cost that we could nevr ed by the department with the request use it as we do now. As Finland, thal it be analved.Asis the -custom, or aniy of the Scandanavian countries, Ill4inois ........ foma.......... IIclIig'all ...... 01110........... Mim1lesota ... Pardue....... Nortinvestern . Iron 3 1 Lost 1 1 Pet 1.{}444) .754) .667 r f__ _ __1____Indiana . ... 0 2 .()}( Carnzival Planned 'WILL TAKE PI 3TURLS ICiao( f l sl 4 0 3 AM I To Y ak O eing Confirmation of the Einstein theory Of SWinmmigPool by means of the eclipse of the sunS nat Tu s I A- ~~~~on January 21 will occupy the atten- r ;ea un Alteoeigoih no ol I tion of physicists when this plcnonie- 1-," probably cabout March 1 the Union ! ti, Oj''Jfl1 ,ilsaga - ti'h carnival for ion takes place next wcek, acc,,rdlng f those men who f to part in the cam-E to Frof. Wail'am S. Kirmball of the G urE ev ti n paign which closed last week. This physics department. This, famous Gu E l v to open iing Will be for these 'oren only, theory is thle result of the principle i nasm uch as it was. through them of rea#ativity t hat all motions are rel-l Washington, Jan. 19.-Elevation, for that the realization of the pool was a vat ec t sih-osbet the present at least, of the big guns oni mawde IossaileC obser ve galaolaite met vats, thirteen of America's battleshlips, op- TheUnonhasexrese~ tan 1 hotograaphzs of the sky will be tali-" posed by President Coolidge, was re- to the alunini, faculty and students{ en duin the E(clipse Professor K eie wt ephtc lsaprvl !o and ll hos wh cotr~ute totheball d(leared, and then compiared with pool1 for their efforts. htgah Iaen ndroiay day by the Senate. after the analysis was made a reportt they are mere patches when it conies------------------conditions. A displaceEme~ynt of the was given to the sender. In this re-± to funishing the Unitedl states '-withi ~ I JJf tr sntcala mutue wiood. As for Canada it is as had olft' mir d td1 Wen 1 ' port it was stated that no evidence Iaste mmtd tae. hrequrtrbyU LIii u i r.i nsteil s .5 sec onds 0 of precious minerals was found. In an ofstheituprducttiv ed axtet it re answer to the report the party who 1o t suprdcivad tbst:tREM UIRI etheoryv,'fi lrst trtdat the sent the material wrote. «I have not contains onily on quarter of the tire- E TIir ' othle eclil se on Al ay 29, 1915. b er the United States has."!At "ibil ti.oepd aswreon heard from you since I sent you the Tt.ethositimproboem ofitboths Were :eii sand containing silver, gold, plant- - P oilpole fbt uowoart, one to northern raz ilta md on- innt.n~ adu."Iand our own country is greatly at- i :: oal !,,dents who have lost ;other to w~est Africa. Observaltion r "eSince th UitdStteradium. fected by the future of the woods of;: o ercoa's dtaini the pa!t fewv weeks. :ieatht1pcsel(' yths their country, according to D~r. Schell- !Ltolipaiiid by 1 cetect ive Carl Arnold inl SoutVh America, iverifiied they tllenrv corporation has pronoumncedl the sand c k. "Thie social problem dlependls a; of the Ain Arbor limlhp td!partmnent, h [li sp.l accm eat beingef ry close to as cotainng rdium I cn exractgreat deal oil tiehousing que stion,''went to Is),;rolt Satrdairy in anm effort I list lpre ci(t fed. InI: 1 "? oliserv tti ons the radium myself. I ai not as ignor-Ilie said. "Give a German a cabinl of to identify a nuinbher of coats which fromt Australia gage the deflect ion of ant as you might judge by the hand- his own and there is no socialismr. As ; Jetri O police officials thought. aight