The Weather Partly cloudy Thursday, Fri- day mostly cloudy, possibly lo-. cal rain or snow. L A6F Of -ILF-IL ANOAwrwt i ilatt Editorials News Would Revive "01 Reliable"; On Defacing Li brary Books. I I1 I VAE. XT.TV air.. yn V WL. AbLL INo. 47 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, JANUARY 11, 1934 PRICE FIVE Cl Yale lumn Se t Navy Planes Hop Off For nawaiianIs Commander Hopes To B In Honolulu Tonight Weather Reported Goo Will Be Longest Formation Fligh Vessels Guard Ocean I Case Of Mishap; Plan T Fly At 500-Foot Heigh SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 10- (P) - The massed flight of six huge nav planes to Honolulu began at 2:2 p. m. (Pacific Standard Time, 5:2 p.. Ann Arbor time) today, th ships heading out the Golden Gat onttheir 2,400-mile non-stop journe after the start had been delayed more than two hours by lack o wind. Although the first ship took th air shortly after noon, the five other planes were forced to make numero attempts to get into the air, the lasi one finally going aloft at 2:13 p. m "We expect to go through on schedule and eat pineapples in Ho- nolulu tomorrow," declared Lieut.- Cor. Knefler McGinnis, commande of the history-making flight, just be- fore he boarded his flagship. Longest Nonstop Mass Hop In beautiful three-plane forma- tion, the six giant ships pointed thei noses westward in the longest massed nonstop flight ever attempted. The sun shone on their glistening wings Strung along the wide expanse of ocean were sixnNavy guard ships in case the planes should be forced down. General weather conditions along the route indicated average to good flying conditions, although the planes were expected to encounter a fog bank some distance off the coast. The squadron leader said that he planned to fly only about 500 feet above the ocean unless the fog was thick. Head Out To Sea The planes passed through the Golden Gate at 2:29 p. m. and headed out to sea on their great ad- venture. Lack of wind delayed the flight because the heavily loaded flying boats were unable in numerous at- tempts to get into the air. The 10-P-4, piloted by Lieut. T. D. Guinn, of Atlanta, was the first aloft about 1:11 p. in. Then the big craft of Lieutenant Commander Knefler 'McGinnis left the water, then the two planes had to circle about while they waited for the other planes to join them. For two hours the others made ineffectual attempts to lift their bows into the air, and finally succeeded after many efforts. In waiting for the start, the 10-P-4 had probably used the amount of gasoline which officers had figured as a leeway for the flight. Alpha N Wins Debate From Sigma Rho Tau Alpha Nu of Kappa Phi Sigma, honorary speech society defeated Sig- ma Rho Tau, engineering stump speakers society in a debate held last night by a two to one decision of the judges. The question debated on was "Re- solved, that the United States gov- ernment should own and operate all commercial radio broadcasting sta- tions." The affirmative team of Alpha Nu was represented by Paul E. Belknap, '35, Charles Brownson, '35, and Charles Rogers, '34. On the Sigma Rho Tau negative team were Allen E. Cleveland, '35E, Saul M. Ferman, '34E, and Albert J. Stone, '34E. The critic judges of the debate were Prof. Floyd K. Riley of the ,peech department, Prof. Louis Eich of the speech department, and Prof. L. J. McFarlane of the engineering colleges. As a point in their debate the Alpha Nu team had a radio in the room and turned it on to illustrate the type of advertising heard under the present system. Miisters To Refuse in _ ®_-_ -l .." _ Q v 1-_ Gives Views Court Ruling Is Explained By Law Dean Henry M. Bates Upholds Supreme Court Decision In Mortgage Case Supporters Undiiy Elated, He Says Stand Of Chief Justice Is Not Unexpected In View Of Reports DEAN HENRY M. BATES President Asks Ratification Of Seaway Treaty Navigation And Power Are Main Considerations, : Special Message Says WASHINGTON, Jan. 10. -() - President Roosevelt this afternoon in a message to the Senate advocated the St. Lawrence Waterway Treaty with Canada and asked "the consid- . eration of ratification." "Navigation and power," he listed as the two main considerations and said: "I am satisfied that the treaty con- tains adequate provision for the needs of the Chicago drainage dis- trict and for navigation between Lake Michigan and the Mississippi River." "I subscribe to the definite belief that the completion of the seaway will greatly serve the economic and transportation needs of a vast area of the United States and should therefore, be considered solely from the National point of view," he added. * * * "This river is a source of incomparably cheap power located in proximity to a great industrial and rural market and within transmission distance of millions of domestic con- sumers. Points to N. Y. Action "The legislature of the State of New York by unanimous vote set up the necessary state machinery during my term as governor of New York and the state stands ready to co- operate with the Federal government in the distribution of power in ac- cordance with what I believe is today a definite National policy." Opposition did not await arrival of the President's message, Senator Robert F. Wagner, New York Dom- ocrat, breaking with the Adminis- tration to condemn the treaty in a minority committee report. In the House, Reps. Hamilton Fish, Jr., and James M. Mead, of New York both termed the treaty "unfair" to their state. Proponents of the pact professed confidence in ratification,regardless. Additional Cut For Working Hours Is Seen Senate Makes Decision To Penalize War Debt De- faulters Also WASHINGTON, Jan. 10- (P) - A vision of a new cut in the working hours of Americans was flashed upon the Washington scene tonight to share attention with a decision by the Senate to penalize war debt de- faulters. Hugh S. Johnson proposed the for- mer; the Senate attached the penalty for debt defaulters to the liquor tax bill in the form of higher taxes on liquors from those countries. John- son will thresh out the hour cut with leaders of coded industries on Feb. 15. Even as the Senate was passing the liquor tax bill after a debate so short as to recall the prices-harried activity of the special session, the Federal Alcohol Control Administra- By E. JEROME PETTIT Proponents of the New Deal who seem to have found cause for great satisfaction in the decision of the United States Supreme Court uphold- ing the constitutionality of the Min- nesota mortgage moratorium act might just as well cease kicking their heels together in the light of the ex- planations made concerning the ac- tion by Dean Henry M. Bates of the University Law School, nationally recognized authority on constitu- tional law. The New Dealers feel that the Min- nesota law giving to the owners of mortgaged property relief through the courts is the first emergency measure of the new administration to be tested by the highest tribunal of the land and that its acceptance by that body indicates a "judicial change of. heart" which would favor other so-called "liberal" legislation. Supporters Unduly Elated According to Dean Bates the sup- porters of the President's program who were "elated because Chief Jus- tice Hughes and Associate Justice Roberts had chosen to take the 'lib- eral' side in the closely divided court" have not looked into the situation as thoroughly as they might have before rejoicing. "Chief Justice Hughes has never been extremely conservative, espe- cially since he returned to the Su- preme Court," Dean Bates said, indi- cating that the stand which the emi- nent juror took in this particular case was not as unexpected as many re- ports have suggested. "Hughes showed by an elaborate course of reasoning that the emer- gency which now faces this country may be considered one of the factors to determine whether legislation is reasonable and therefore within the due process of law or whether it vio- lates that principle," Dean Bates stated. Emergency Is Considered It is wrong to assume that the Su- preme Court has upheld legislation which would in any sense impair the obligation of contracts merely be- cause it sanctioned the action of the Minnesota courts, Dean Bates ex- plained. He pointed out that this par- ticular state law merely "postpones the closing of a mortgage and that, due to the conditions which now exist in Minnesota, neither the mortgagor nor the mortgagee have been dis- criminated against, since foreclosures at the present time would seriously harm both parties without accomp- lishing any great amount of good, ex- cept in isolated cases." It is likewise ridiculous to assume that this action of the Supreme Court's can have any effect upon measures to come before that body in the future, he insisted. It is true that the decision is considered by many to be very liberal and that such ac- tion was unexpected in many quar- ters, but in the light of the circum- stances which surround the passing of the original legislation the judg- ment of the great court is not at all surprising, Dean Bates explained. "A careful examination of the opinions of Chief Justice Hughes will show that he has, on the whole, taken a more 'liberal' view than for- mer Justice Holmes," he said. "I don't consider him narrowly conserv- ative at all. I think he has held and (Continued on Page 6) Yale Alumni Seek T o Control School Policy On Sport. NEW YORK, -Jan. 10;- () - The talk among Yale alumni here today in connection with the agitation over the football coaching situation was that Malcolm Farmer, director of athletics, will be asked to resign un- less he accepts the recommendation of a graduate advisory committee for the engagement of an "outsider" as head coach, preferably Harry G. Kipke, of Micig ai. Publicly, at least, there were no further developments or indications of any change in the situation, which finds six out of seven members of the advisory committee opposed to Farmer's plan to restore T. A. D. Jones as head coach this year. At the Yale Club, where President James Rowland Angell and Farmer were among the guests at an alumni luncheon, doormen said Farmer in- structed them to say he would give "nothing to the {press." Daily Subscriptions Must Be Paid Up Now Students who have not paid for their Daily subscriptions in full must do so by the end of the month or their names will be turned in to the proper authorities at that time, J. L. Efroymson, '35, circulation manager, announced yesterday. Payments can be made at the Student Publications Building, Maynard Street. Big ill Tilden. eas Vines n 3 Straight Sets Auer Names 3 Tendencies In Theology Harvard Professor Lists Classifications B e fo r e Religious Institute Attacks Viewpoint Of Fundamentalists Humanist And Modernist Doctrines Are Outlined in Church Talk That there are three tendencies in modern theology was the opinion ex- pressed by Prof. J. Fagginger Auer of the Harvard Divinity School, speaking before the Institute on Lib- eral Religion last night in the Uni- tarian Church. e classified them as supernatur- alism, or a tendency to get clarity regarding the things of God; hu- manism, a tendency to get clarity regarding the things of man; and modernism, a tendency which at- tempts to unite the other two. In criticizing the American funda- mentalist group, Professor Auer questioned their use of such premises as the existences of a God, who may be comprehended; that if there be such a God, the assumption that the Bible is his revelation; and finally. the assumption that the Bible is in- fallible. Saying that these criticism have not yet received a satisfactory reply from the fundamentalists, he admits that there was a certain logic in the system, providing that its firsi assumptions be accepted. Humanism's viewpoint was next briefly outlined by Professor Auer: "It agrees that human life must be considcered in relation to the external universe of which it is a part, but it maintains that the center of interest should not be the relation of life to its background, but that life itself, It insists that whereas for many years we have been talking about the nature and activities of God, it is time that we should now turn our attention to the nature and the ac- tivities of man. Instead of theology, let us now have anthropology." Concerning the modernists, the speaker became openly critical. He stated that they liked to be liberal, but hated no longer to be orthodox. "Since they have much to say about superlogic and the play of emotions, they are saved the trouble of being definite," was Professor Auer's view. For the meeting last night Prof. Ralph Sawyer of the physics depart- ment was chairman. Tonight Pro- fessor Auer will speak on "Humanism -The Swing Away from Fundamen- talism and Modernism," at 8 p. m., with Prof. Roy W. Sellars of the phi- losophy department as chairman. Hallensleben To Be Buried Today Funeral services for William P. E. Hallensleben, German graduate stu- dent who committed suicide Monday afternoon, will be held at 2 p. m. today in the Staffan Funeral Hall at 513 East Huron St. The Rev. Allison R. Heaps of the Congregational Church, with which Mr. Hallensleben was affiliated, will conduct a short funeral service. Interment will be at Forest Hills cemestery. FLYERS KILLED IN DALLAS DALLAS, Tex., Jan. 10 -(P) - Two flyers were killed and search was started for a third who was be- lieved to have been in a private plane which crashed at White Rock Lake here late today when in banking for a turn, a wing touched the water. Veteran Is Pressed Only In' First Set Of Match Be- fore tapacity ( rowdi NEW YORK, Jan. 10 - (AP) - Be-l fore a record American tennis gal-t lery, nearly 17,000 spectators, Bigi Bill Tilden, 41-year-old veteran, handed a straight set trouncing to-t night to Ellsworth Vines, 22-year-l old Californian and former world's amateur champion making his pro- fessional debut. The score was 8-6, 6-3, 6-2.k Tilden was extended by the hard- hitting western youth only in thet first set when the lanky Vines scoredc with frequent outbursts of blistering fore-hand driving, but yielded after1 a spectacular deuce battle for points.r Thereafter the old master, covering his court with an agility that belied his years and loosing an assortmentt of strokes that had his young rival dizzy, administered a tennis spank-1 ing to the Californian. Vines electrified the capacity crowd with many of his booming shots, but there was no doubt about the out- come orsTilden's mastery after the first set, even though it seemed the consensus of experts that the western star was showing his best tennis since. he ruled the amateur heightsd at home and abroad in 1932.a Tilden's service was no more diffi- t cult to handle than the delivery of5 young master Vines, but it was moreF consistently effective. Big Bill's fore-C hand wallop was not quite the sting-v ing weapon that Vines unfurled whenf the latter had a clear opportunity to wind up and apply the power, butc again it was more accurate and bet- ter placed. Off the back-hand, Vines revealed himself a showman by try- ing the Australian two-handed grip7 in the first set but he didn't havev much time thereafter to attempt thisI unorthodox manoeuver due to thev pressure of his opponent's raking1 shots.a PROF. J. F. AUER Movie Price Discu1ssion On Council Slate Plan Action On Auto Ban Petition To Regents; Se- cure Official Backing An investigation into the prices charged for movies, as well as other matters of student nature, will be discussed at the meeting of the U- dergraduate Council at 5 p. m. to- day in the Union, it was announced last night. Beside the question of movie prices, the Council will take up preliminary plans for the Goodwill fund drive, held annually for the relief of needy students. Arrangements will also be made in connection with Cap Night. A proposed amendment, which will provide for a tryout system of choos- ing the president of the Council, is to be considered. A letter will be drafted, which is to be sent to the Board of Regents, about a petition for a modification of the auto ban. This movement, which resulted from the All-Campus poll recently, has received the support of the administration. It was announced that the plan is to be decided in its final form today. The council meeting will be open to the student body. Lindberg h Got $250,000 For Advisory Work Senate Airmail Contract Investigation Committee Discloses Payment WASHINGTON, Jan. 10. --) - How Transcontinental Air Transport Corp, Inc., gave Charles A. Lindbergh 25,000 shares of the company's stock for his advisory services was ex- plained to the Senate Airmail Con- tract Investigation Committee today by D. M. Sheaffer, chairman of the company's executive committee. Sheaffer termed Lindbergh's serv- ices extremely valuable, and for them the famed aviator was presented with stock valued at $250,000 and paid $10,000 a year. Sheaffer said that a complicated system used for transfer of the stock to Lindbergh was "for income tax purposes." Rivals Squeezed Out Sheaffer also told the committee that representatives of big airlines had collaborated with former Post- master General Walter F. Brown in drawing specifications for air mail contracts which practically precluded award of the contracts to smaller in- dependents. Further testimony was presented to show that correspondence of Brown, postmaster general in the Hoover Ad- ministration, was burned shortly be- fore he left office. Sheaffer submitted copies of sev- eral letters to Brown regarding air- mail contracts. Chairman Hugo D. Black, of the Senate Investigating Committe, com- mented that this correspondence had not been found in the Postoffice files. Hainer Hinshaw, former official of American Airways, told investigators that that airline agreed not to bid for an airmail route at the request of Brown. Verifies Correspondence Hinshaw verified correspondence placed before a Senate investigating U nitarianSpeaker Chicago Milk Strike EndQ With Tru Federal Government Is Cause Of Cessation Of Virtual Civil War Arbitration Board Will Be Selected Settlement Is Regarded As Favorable To Farmers; Rush First Supply CHICAGO, Jan. 10. - M)-The Chicago milk, blockade was ended today as the Federal government moved toward stern intervention against interference with interstate shipments and with the United States mails. Settlement of the strike was in the form of a truce signed by repre- sentatives of the farmers, the big Chicago dairies, and even the inde- pendent dairies which in the past have refused torguarantee any min- imum price to producers. Under terms of the truce, a medi- ation board of three members, one from the distributors, one from the farmers and a third to be selected by the first two, will be named to agree on a fair price to be paid farm- ers. Violence Approaches War The settlement cane as violence and sabotage in Chicago and the territory for 100 miles around reached the point of virtual civil war. Thousands of gallons of milk had been spilled on highways, trucks and dairies wrecked, nine trains stopped and searched for milk, dairymen slugged. When the embargo endel there was not a drop of milk for sale in Chicago stores, even families with small children could obtain none; and deliveries to hospitals and in- stitutions were threatened. The settlement in many ways was regarded as more favorable to. farm- ers than any condition previously prevailing in the huge Chicago mar- ket, even under the milk marketing act put into effect by the Agricul- tural Adjustment Act and abandoned Jan. 1. Milk Supply Rushed For the first time, independnnt dairies (non members of the Chicago Milk Council, Inc.) will pay on a minimum price basis for their milk. Signing of the truce was the signal for the huge trucks of the Chicago dairies to roll out of their garages and rumble away to the country for supplies of milk. Some of them loaded up within 40 miles of the city and were back within three hours. Co-Eds Still In Hospital After Crash, Nov.25 Eileen Simpson Is Forced To Have Leg Amputated As Infection Sets In General improvement is reported by University Hospital authorities in the condition of the three women students still in the hospital as the result of an automobile accident which took place Nov. 25 at a grade crossing on Pontiac Road near Grand River Avenue between Detroit and Ann Arbor. Virginia Whitney, '36, who suffered lacerations of the face, and Lucille Herrold, a teacher from Grand Rap- ids and driver of the car which struck a stationary freight train, who received bruises, burns, and a broken arm, have been released from the hospital, and although immediate re- lease for the other three girls is not in sight, they are no longer in danger, according to Mrs. Simpson, mother of two of the girls. Mrs. Simpson has been in attendance at the hospital ever since the accident occurred seven weeks ago. Eileen Simpson, '36Ed., who suf- fered a fractured leg and burns, underwent a leg amputation opera- tion several days ago, necessitated by an infection which had set in. Two transfusions were necessary before the operation could be accomplished. Charlotte Simpson, '34Ed., who also suffered a broken leg, and severe Success Of Everest Flight Due To Leader's Careful Planning '37 Literary Class Will 1 Collect Dues Immediately Dues for the class of '37 of the literary college will be collected im- mediately, Tex Wilkins, treasurer, announced yesterday. Dues, which amount to 25 cents, can be paid to committee members, who will be in freshman classes. Members of the committee include, Peggy Abbott, Margaret S. Annas, William B. Cor- nell, Betty Kelly, Joseph Kinshow, John B. Osgood, Robert B. Owen, Thomas T. Oyler, Robert H. Pulver, Like all great successful scientific ventures the aerial conquest of Ev- erest, which will be the subject of Air Commodore P. F. M. Fellowes when he speaks Jan. 25 on the fourth Oratorical lecture offering in Hill A u d i t o r i u m, was meticulously planned and careful attention was given to every minute detail. It was not until all conditions were as fav- orable as possible that the two planes left the Lalbalu airdrome to accom- nl-, thQ sae cin, 1VP 1 The tenth day of waiting, April 3, last, Commodore Fellowes took the Moth up at 5:30 a. m. and came down with a report, "reasonably sat- isfactory flying conditions." The two Westland plans with high powered British radial motors and propellers torqued to attain maxi- mum power development at 13,000 feet, left the Lalbalu airdrome at 8 a. m. and at approximately 10 a. m. were a scant 200 feet above the peak of "Nature's last stronghold," 31,000