TH E MiCHIGAN DAILY Will Help, ners Pay Off I Mortgages Aid To Be Given e In Need If Act es Both Houses .oosevelt Plan Guards Escort Iowa Mob Leaders To Encampment First, Second Mortgages Will Be Accepted For Collateral On Notes (By The Associated Press) WASHINGTON, May 3.-Provi- sions for special loans to debt-bur- dened farmers faced with the pros- pect of losing their homes will be the first portion of the farm mortgage bill administered when congressional action on the entire Roosevelt farm program is completed. It was learned today that Henry Morgenthau, Jr., farm board chair- man, and governor-designate of the farm credit administration which will begin functioning May 27, has completed arrangements for giving quick aid under this provision. It is separate from the bill's authorization to refinance up to $2,000,000,000 in farm mortgages through issuance of Federal land bank bonds whose in- terest will be guaranteed by the gov- ernment. Expect Compromise The special aid provision author- ized an advance of funds by the Re- construction Corporation. The Sen- ate bill proposed that this advance be limited to $200,000,000; the House $300,000,000. A compromise at $250,- 000,000 may be approved by congres- sional conferees who are expected to adjust such differences in the meas- -Associated Press Photo Some of the men arrested as a result of an Iowa mob attack on a district judge are shown as they were taken from the national guard armory at Le Mars, la, to the guards' encampment at the Le Mars County Club. Pollock Brands Adolf Hitler 'A Demagogue', Says Program Is Worst Wave Of Fanaticism Since Anabaptists Prof. James K. Pollock of the polit- ical science department brandedj Adolph Hitler, German dictator, "a( demagogue of the worst school," in a recent speech and said his Nazi program is.the worst wave of fanat-' icism since the Anabaptist outbreak in the Middle Ages. In his taik Professor Pollock out- lined the political, social, spiritual, ?conomic, and foreign relations as- pects of the Nazi program. Politically he said that it embraced the idea of perfect unity of the German states with one man at its head. Spiritual- ly, Professor Pollock said it was a Hitler church, worshipping the four million sons and fathers that were killed in the World War. The economic theory was de- scribed as one of complete economic self-sufficiency. Commenting further Professor Pollock said that he be- lieves that if Dr. Bruening had re- tained the chancellorship, the liberal opinion of all the people in the world would have conceded justice to him and the terms he asked. Professor Pollock termed the social aspects of the Nazi plan "comical", describing them as an attempt to breed a nation of 100 per cent Ger- mans by employing a eugenic system whereby only certain people would be allowed to perpetuate the race. U.H.S. Will Present Musical Programs In celebration of National Music Week, University High School is pre-. senting several special musical pro- grams in the high school auditorium under the direction of Miss Odina Olson, teacher of music in the high school. The next two programs are as fol- lows: "The Dizzy Baton," by Car- rington, 8:30 a. m., Thursday; A cantata, "Trees," music by Ferris,, words by Sidney Lanier and Cather- ine Grimes, 3:30 p. m., Friday. The students of the seventh grade and high school have also organized an elaborate musical display in the display case on the first floor hall of the high school, consisting of less familiar musical instruments, numer- ous scenes from the operatic works of Wagner, and a miniature sym- phony orchestra. COLLEGIATE OBSERVER By MASON HALL "In the spring a young man's fancy turns to love and-" Co-eds,, as de- fined by a McGill student are women who attempt to compete for an edu- cation with the higher type of hu- man. The co-ed's right to such a distinction may be judged by some of her activities presented herewith. Wheaton College co-eds cannot dance, go to shows, or neck, and must have a prayer before each class. Neither can they ride with men in cars at any time-University of Ari- zona co-eds are now ' paying their own way when out with men. They are also entitled to ask the boys for dates-Purdue University women are now given the opportunity to attend a "Charm School" where they learn such important things as how to hold a cigarette gracefully, and how to avoid spilling cocktails on their best party gowns. According to a Long Island Uni- versity professor of psychology, who conducted an experiment to deter- mine the scholastic abilities of vari- ous types of co-eds, blondes ranked highest in their studies, brunettes next, and red heads last. This state- ment refers to natural blondes, not the synthetic type. Instead of portraits of beautiful co-eds, the Ohio Wesleyan annual this spring will substitute students distinguished for scholarship and ac- tivities. Glorifying American co-eds' brains? ? ? University of California co-eds are, in a fashion, generally educated. An informal survey there revealed the startling fact that only nine of the entire co-ed body are unkissed. Of course, that was last week; University of Utah men say that co-eds are uninteresting, unintelli- gent, and expect nothing but patter from their dates. Anyway, they be- lieve all the select women are mort- gaged before coming to college., Observings from here and there- Irony? According to the Purdue Ex- ponent, the captain of the Okla- homa University track team was ar- rested for hitch-hiking-Students who fail in a subject at the Uni- versity of Washington are not per- mitted to use the library-Six stu- dents at the University of Denver were suspended after attending classes in bathing suits-One of the duties of the first professor at Ro- chester University was to chase cows off the campus. Two German Schools Fire 30 Professors Noted Jewish Specialists Among Those Dismissed By Hitler Regime BERLIN, May 3.-(,)-The open- ing of the summer semester at Ger- man schools and universities under the auspices of the Hitler regime has been marked by the dismissal of 30 professors from Berlin and Cologne universities. Meanwhile the students' federa- tion of the former institution has in- augurated a boycott against Jews re- maining on the staff, contending that "the German students resent having the principles of knowledge and thinking set by Jews." "It is the duty of every German student," the federation declared, "neither to enroll in courses nor to hear lectures given by Jews." Dismissal of the 30 professors, 21 from Berlin university and 9 from the Cologne school, was announced Tuesday by Bernard Rust, Prussian education minister. Among those ousted frem the Ber- lin institution was the noted cancer specialist, Ferdinand Blumenthal. Ferdinand Franz Friedmann, tuber- culosis specialist; Eugen Mittwoch, orientalist; Walter Norden, philolo- gist; Issi Schur, mathematician; and the Celtic expert, Julius Pokorny, ac- companied him. Leo Spitzer, specialist in ancient Roman law, and Eugen Schmalen- bach, political economist, fell under the ban at Cologne university. Circularizing the Prussian students' federation incident with the an- nouncement of the ousting of the 30 professors, Rust asked that the high reputation of German univer- sities be maintained under the new regime. He admonished the students: "Do not allow yourselves to be misled by isolated lapses of professors who fail to comprehend the signs ofnthe time. I shall expel both them and students who cause disturbances." MAKE GAS MASKS MILAN, Italy, May 2.--UP)--Fac- tories here have filed an order for 2,000,000 gas masks to be sold to the public as a safety measure. NAME CARDS r-inted on Finest Linen Cad, in OLD ENGLISH Type ro incioze in Commencement Invitations. Correctness & Satisfaction Guarantcsa P1OSTPAiD ONLY 10c a DOZEN PERRY DAVIS, JR. Box 263 - Lafayette, Indiana as now provided, will aers either on first or ges upon the whole or is farm property, real ncluding crops. The e mortgage together .ebtedness cannot ex- nt of 'the value of the will a loan of more be available to any st will be at the rate with no payment on irst three years. ortgage Holders n of the loan-aimed s prevent loss of their that holders of mort- liens arrange to the f the government to ht to proceed against roperty because of de- uid have the effect of aclosures. e intended to provide ,1 for farm operations any farmer to redeem farm property lost losure since July 1, iacists To Trip To Itle Creeki At least 40 students and faculty members of the College of Pharmacy will go on the inspection trip to Battle Creek and Kalamazoo manu- facturing plants Friday, according' to Prof. C. H. Stocking of the phar- macy college. Finding it inadvisable to charter a bus as in former, years, the party will go in faculty and student cars. The trip will take an entire day, half a day being spent in each of the cities. Production of food preparations will be studied at the Kellogg plant in Battle Creek in the morning, Pro- fessor Stocking said. The group will have luncheon at the Columbia Hotel in Kalamazoo and will spendx the afternoon at the plant of the Upjohn Compahy there. While a. Detroit trip, alternately visiting the Parke-Davis Company and the Stearns plant, is made every year, the western trip is offered only in alternate years. The Detroit trip this year was made two weeks ago. The pharmacy school has made excursions to Chicago in certain years, as well as to Battle Creek and Kalamazoo, Professor Stocking said. In Chicago the Abbott Laboratories, the Bauer and Black Company, Ar- mour's Research Laboratories, and Walgreen Company's -manufacturing plant were visited. Librarian Students To Interview Dr. Bishop Students desiring to study library science next fall are now being inter- viewed by William W. Bishop, libra- rian,and other members of ther i- brary science department. The minimumrequirements for ad- mission are a good reading knowledge, of French and German and an honor point average of one and one-half. "This procedure is really for the pro- tection of the student," Mr. Bishop rcnl'Iainr c .rlaA - Skay Ride Will Be Thriller At World's Fair Two Towers 625 Feet In Height Support Cables For fast Rocket Cars The supreme amusement thrill of the Century of Progress Exposition to be held this summer in Chicago is the "Sky Ride." As visitors at. the former world's fair in 1893 at Chicago returned home to-tell their friends of the gi- gantic ferris wheel that astounded the adventurous souls of - the gay nineties, so it is expected by fair ex- ecutives that this modern thrill will be remembered by 1933 visitors to Chicago. The "Sky Ride," which combines the thrill of an airplane with the safety of a modem railroad, is an en- gineering masterpiece that might well be taken for some scientist's dream rather than an actual creation. The engineering ideas involved are taken from structural methods developed in steel construction of towers and sus- pension bridges. Twin towers, each 625 feet in height, out-top the Washington Mon- ument. No building in Chicago ca equal them in height, and they will afford a wonderful view of the city. Three states, Michigan, Illinois, and Indiana, may be seen from the tower, as well as a large portion of Lake Michigan. The towers are placed 2,000 feet apart. One is located on the main- land south of Soldiers Field and the other on. Northerly Island,,part of the man-made land on which the ex- position is being held. Express eleva- tors will carry passengers to the ob- servation platforms on the tops of the towers. At the 200 foot level, steel cables are extended between the two towers. It is on these cables that the rocket cars which provide transportation be- tween the two towers will operate. These cars as well as the cables are tested to assure safety for the pas- sengers. on the front of each car is a pro- peller, but the actual locofmotion is provided for by cabies. On the back stern of the cars are rocket tubes which emit a colored vapor. A pilot and individual seats are included in each car. The naximum capacity of this mil- lion dollar attraction of 4,800 persons per hour. The distance through the air traveled on a one way trip is 1,- 850 feet. .This exceeds the span of the Brooklyn Bridge by approximate- ly 300 feet. Neither the Manhattan Bridge nor the Williamsburg Bridge have a span that approaches that of the "Sky Ride." JPresident IR thven To Open Student Parley (Continied from Page 1) will be made at the plenary session tomorrow night to bring all of the related economic problems together into a general set of conclusions. Organizations supporting the con- ference are the Student Christian Association, the International Rela- tions Club, the Council of Religions, the Michigan Union, the Cosmopoli- tan Club, the Chinese Students' Club, the University's International Com- mittee, the economics department, the Political' science department, the sociology department, the journalism department, and the Oriental lan- guages department. nd Faculty men acting in an advisory By ROBERT HEWETT 1 There are nearly 8,000 different pipes in the Frieze Memorial Organ1 in Hill Auditorium-Palmer Chris- tian, University organist, isn't quite sure of the exact number for he gets a different total each time he counts; them. Square pipes, round pipes, cone- shaped pipes, in fact practically every known type of organ pipe is crowded into the space backstage. Narrow passages wind their wayt through a maze of towering, two- fcot-wide pipes.Narrow ladders lead up to successive levels where the1 pipes are located in banks and tiersI until the topmost group, high above the grating over the stage, is reached. The 90 pipes that are visible from the auditorium belonged to the old organ that was replaced by the Skin-3 ner organ in 1928 and are no longerI connected with the instrument board. The largest of the pipes are a three sets of square wooden columns, I two feet across and 32 feet high,I which sound the deepest notes. TheirI vibration in most cases is felt ratherI than heard. The "Bombarde" pro- duces a very loud and "snarly" tone;r the "Violin" has a definite pitch in a somewhat "edgy" or string-like quality; and the "Diapason" (saved from the old organ) has, in the lower Dest -Speakers In Class Of 40' Will Talk Here 12 Leaders Of Extension Lecturing Group Give' Addresses Tonight Twelve members of an-extension class in practical public speaking taught by Prof. G. E. Densmore of the department of speech and gen- eral linguistics will come here today as a part of their class wrk to de- liver a series of special addresses for the benefit of the public. They will convene at 7:45 p. m. in Room 4203 Angell Hall. These persons, who have been se- lected as the best speakers in a class of forty, represent a cosmopolitan group of business executives and pro- fessional men. Every one of them is a college graduate and three of them are Michigan alumni. They will each give a four minute speech; and the program will run one hour. There will be no admission charge. The public is invited. The persons who will speak are Walter O. Joachim, director of re- ligious education, St. Mark's M. E. Church, Detroit; O. Warren Harvey, lawyer; Roy E. McFee, of the Grand Trunk Western Railway, who is a Phi Beta Kappa; Dr. Samuel D. Harris, dentist, a graduate of the University of Michigan; Roy C. Goodwin, owner of the Michigan Magnesia Co., a University of Michigan graduate; Norman H. Birnkrant, attorney and public administor of Wayne County; Miss Aileen Spafford, interior deco- ration editor of the Detroit Free Press; Dr. Harry F. Dibble, physician and surgeon; William F. Catlin, man- ager, Ebling Creamery Co.; William Todd Fray, president of the Gray- Garfield-Lang Advertising Corpora- tion; Dr. Bruce C. Lockwood, physi- cian and surgeon, and a graduate of the University of Michigan; and Charles MacCabe Smith, advertising' Christian's Fingers On Console Control Tones In 8,000 Pipes nmql... % i 50c Wilson Success GOLF BALLS 25c 1 ECONOMY PRICES THURSDAY - FRIDAY - SATURDAY AT ALL ALKINS FLETCHER, C DRUG ,SOE U U U U N EST LE Chocoiate Bars 15c Almond or Plain 35c Palmolive Shaving Cream 19C Limit One I I I U pipes, little definition of pitch but gives the rumble that is felt in many parts of the building. Between these two extremes there aro all sizes and shapes. Some are flared at the end like a bugle. Others are conical and suddenly constricted at the end. Plugs in the end of some modify the tone. Some give a "fuzzy" sound, while one actually "stutters." The expansion and contraction of the metals necessitates constant tun- ing. In the uppermost tier electric heaters are used at some seasons of the year to keep a constant tempera- ture, while a ventilating system is used to remove stagnant air. The smallest pipe is one of a group 30 or 40 feet above the stage. It is no larger than a lead pencil and emits a faint squeak. Pipes may be divided into two main classes-reed and flue. In the former the tone is produced exactly like the tone of a clarinet or oboe- by wind actuating a reed held in the lower part of the pipe. In flues, the wind acts as it does in a flute or com- mon tin whistle. - I I 50c Eversharp PENCILS l9C 50c PEPSODENT ANTISEPTIC 60c AST R I NGOSOL... 75c VAPEX ......... 35c STACOMB...... $1.00 PROBAK BLADES' L53c Limit One 50c DEW .31c .39c .49c .21c ,34c .34c .23c . 19c .37c 50c K ILYNO TOOT H PASTE Limit One U - 60c FORHANS PASTE. 35c CUTEX REMOVER 25c TESORO CAST I LE. 25c LYPS I L .. . 5k F -" am 1 u-u. on" u-un 50c Hob u ry Creams 29C VON ) $1.00 FIANCEE FACE POWDER. lNGRAM SHAVING CREAM. 60c BROMO SELTZER.. . . t 50c X-BAZIN . 63c .211e $5.40 Folding 'Vest JPocCet CAMERA $1098 ' 75c ACIDINE . 50c RESP I NOL - .3c .1+c .2c i i ~- I U $1.00 Claridge Playing Cards I U U U m.rosm. i- M M U I Oc Olympic SOAP 'fit -:: :. ;; y ..yi. . ,! 1 . y _. A Real Treat! 59c Double Deck I I U U U U U I FRESH STRAWBERRY' I 5c Sundaes IOC LARGE, ROOMY Garment I, N -' I ,