sia Tries THFE MICHIGAN DAILY Henry Pu-Yi Ascends Throne As Emperor Of Manchukuo Professor Urges Teachers To Stop Preaching Of Capitalism Of 101. ri Arctic Ice t Possible Relief ary To Save Lost Report Women And Children Suffering S o vie t Aviators In New York May Be Sent To Alaska As Aid MOSCOW, March 1. -A Russian rescue commission laid plans today to extend to Alaskan bases, if neces- sary, an expedition to save 101 mien and women marooned on an ice floe in the Berring straits, off northern Siberia. Ten members of the Wrangel is- land expedition whose vessel, the Chelisukin, sank Feb. 13, are re- ported to be suffering severely from weakness and exposure. Two small children are among them. "It is not merely a question of rescue now, but the speediest pos- sible rescue," said V. V. Kubysheff, head of the commission. Aviators Arrive Three Russian aviators, one of whom flew to the 'aid of Jimmy Mat- tern when he cracked his plane in a force landing on his 'round-the-world flight, arrived in New York Wednes- day with orders to proceed to Wash- ington and await orders from Mos- cow. CLEVELAND, 0., March 1. - The educational world was brought to life with a shock this week when Clyde R. Miller, professor at Teach- ers C o11e g e Columbia University, speaking at one of the many educa- tional conventions being held here, urged that teachers quit teaching capitalism and begin teaching the need for a new social order. Miller gave his audience twelve axioms. They were: 1. Life is worth living. If it isn't we ought to stand the unemployed up and shoot them or let them starve To Erect Fire Tower Given By University LANSING, March 1- As a result! of a gift from the University of Michigan, a 150-foot fire tower, one of the tallest in the state, is to be erected in the Porter township oil field of Midland county as an in- creased protection against the men- ace of forest fires. Porter township is largely an area of brush and cut-over land in which a grave fire hazard exists during the period from April to November, jeo- pardizing not only private property, but the operations of drillers as well. The gift from the University was in the form of a 253-foot Insley steel builders tower, which was erected at a cost of $3,000 and weighs 1712 tons. It was used in experiments on wind structures. When dismantled, a sufficient por- tion to erect the new 150 foot struc- ture in Midland county will be set aside and the remaining section raised at a site which will be de- termined later. as our financial interests now blandly permit. 2. To sustain life we need air, water, food and clothing. I suspect that if some of our bankers could get a corner on air and sell it they would gladly let some of us suffocate. 3. There are enough food, shelter and clothing to give everybody on the continent all he needs 4. Most of this abundance is con- trolled by a very small minority. Two per cent of our people control 80 per cent of our property. 5. The 2 per cent also control what we think. 6. Most people 4on't yet know there are enough goods for them to live in comfort. The schools never gave us any notion that with proper organization we could have all we wanted. They never taught us that if hours were shorter and profits for the 2 per cent not so big there would be plenty for everybody. 7. Everybody hopes he will be lucky. 8. In a system of rapid mech- anism, individualism can't and won't work. 9. There must be national control of industry and means of life. 10 Teachers m u s t teach these fundamental economic controls. 11. Teachers must have a strong, militant organization. 12. There must be a close alliance between teachers and the great mass of the people who work with their hands and their brains. ALUMNI MEET IN CLEVELAND The largest crowd of Michigan alumni ever to gather at the National Education Association Convention at- tended the breakfast given especially for them by the University Club of Cleveland, during the convention, at the Hotel Cleveland, according to a report received in the office of T. Hawley Tapping, -AssoCis ed EreS k'lotO Henry Pu-Yi, 29 .(left), last of the 300-year-old Ching dynasty, who ascended the throne as a baby and was forced to abdicate in the revolution that made China a republic, became emperor of the Japanese-advised state of Manchukuo yesterday. His enthronement took place at Hsinking, capital of Manchukuo, amid scenes of oriental pageantry. Delicate health prevented the new ruler's 28-year-old consort, Yueh Hua, or "Moon Flower" (right), from taking part in the ceremonies. The daughter of a Manchu businessman, she was selected by Pu-Yi as his bride from a photograph when he was 14 and she 13. '. 1934's Political Turmoil; No. 6, What Your Pre sident Has Done Kubysheff said they may be sent to Alaska to attempt an appeal rescue from Nome. The position of the castaways was last reported as 68.25 north latitude, 173.9 west longitude, approximately 200 miles due west of Point Hope, the nearest Alaskan territory. U. S. Offers Help The three aviators, ranked ,among the foremost in Russia, are S. A. Levenevsky, M a t t e r n's Samaritan, G. A. Ushakoff and Siepney. They sailed for New York aboard the Olympic. They did not carry planes, Kuybsheff said the United States government has not been asked for assistance, but indicated that any help from that quarter would be gratefully recieved by the Soviet gav- ernment. Meantime the Soviets are concen- trating on one of the greatest relief expeditions in the history of Arctic exploration. Three large planes are already at Cape Wellen awaiting fav- orable weather to take off for the ice camp set up with the aid of stores rescued from the sinking Cheliuskin, and the steamer Smolesk, with seven lighter aircraft aboard, sailed today from Vladivostok. Long Delay Necessary The steamer Stalingrad is taking on two more'light planes at Petro- pavlovsk, expecting to sail soon. In addition the aviator M. Vocopianon is now flying ifrom Moscow to Khabarovsk, from where he will hop in easy stages to Cape Wellen in a specially-equipped plane. Kuybysheff estimated that even with the most favorable weather - the most important factor in air- plane rescue operations at this time of year in the Arctic - it probably would be 10 days or two weeks be- fore the full relief forces are con- centrated at the operating bases. Kuybysheff revealed that one of the planes previously dispatched flew over the castaways' camp on the flight from Cape Wellen but could not see the occupants or be seen by them because of a snowstorm. PLAY& BY-PLAY By AL NEWMAN (Continued from Page 1) departure from that normal balanceE of public procedure." He was pre- pared to recommend to Congress the measures which he regarded neces- sary in the circumstances; but should Congress fail to act he would ask that body for "broad executive power to wage a war against the emergency, as great as the power that would be given to me if we were in fact invaded by a foreign foe." Herein he fore- shadowed the grants of extraordinary powers vested in him during the first session of the Seventy-Third Con- gress. Banking Emergency: Faced with a financial crisis on entering office, President Roosevelt made use of a war emergency act of 1917 to pro- claim a bank holiday from March 6 to March 9. Calling a special session of Congress for March 9, he asked for legislative control over the banks. Congress immediately passed the Emergency Banking Act and the President used the power conferred on him to extend the banking holi- day to March 13. On the evening of March 12, by means of a nation-wide radio broadcast, President Roosevelt explained his banking and currency' program and appealed for popular support. Closely associated with the reorganization and reopening of the banks were the Glass-Steagall Act, to reform the national banking system and to insure deposits, and the Secur- ities Act, to prevent fraud in the sale of securities. Economy Program: March 10 the President sent to Congress the draft of an economy bill designed to re- duce Federal expenses by $500,000,- 000, the principal savings to be ef- fected by curtailment in pensions and allowances to war veterans and in pay of government officers and em- ployees. The bill was passed and Lewis Douglas, director of the budget, made drastic cuts, especially in the allowances to veterans whose disabil- ities were not directly attributable to the War. In the face of a move- ment among some of the war veterans to develop popular sentiment in fa- vor of restoration of their previous allowances, President Roosevelt ad- dressed the American Legion Conven- tion in Chicago Oct. 2. He declared that in undertaking to balance the budget the principle must be pre- served "that no person because he wore a uniform must thereafter be placed in a special class of benefi- ciaries over and above all other cit- izens." At the moment of this writ- ing, a movement in Congress to re- store the allowances of veterans and the pay of government employees has led to the threat of the President that he will veto the bill if passed, in its present form. Farm Relief: The President stated that the primary objective of his1 farm relief program was to bring the prices of farm products into pre-war parity with prices of industrial prod-j ucts. As one means toward this end the Agricultural Adjustment Act of May 12 conferred on the Secretary of Agriculture extensive powers to ef- fect reductions in production by con- tract or otherwise, to regulate inter- state and foreign trade in farm prod- ucts, and to levy taxes on processors of farm commodities to pay the ex- penses of the plan. In a message read Dec. 11 before the American Farm Bureau Federation, President Roose- velt asserted that "in a few short months the whole complexion of the agricultural o u t 1 o o k has been changed." While admitting that "we are not yet out of the woods," he said that "we seem to be on our way." In his message to Congress Jan. 3 the President repeated his statement that the farm relief experiment was succeeding. National Recovery Program: Dur- ing his campaign for office President Roosevelt had insisted that a planned economy was essential to re- covery. In the session of Congress which, he called to meet the emer- gency, legislation was introduced to aid the farmers; to provide for the regulation of hours of labor, wages, and industrial production; to co-or- dinate the railroads; to carry out a scheme of social control in the Ten- nessee River Valley; to co-operate with the states to relieve distress; to make loans to home owners; and to initiate and carry out an extensive program of public works. National Industrial Recovery Act: In signing this act, President Roose- velt characterized it as "the most im- portant and far-reaching legislation ever enacted by the American Con- gress." On June 24, in another radio broadcast to the country, he out- lined the theory of the act and asked for support in the "offensive against unemployment." In an address Dec. 7 he expressed the belief that the country was "entering upon a time of great gain" and that it could be ; a prosperity "socially controlled for the common good." Under the provisions of the act codes have been drafted for many industries. Meetings are being held in Washington this week to hear complaints against the opera- tion of the codes, with a view to ren- dering them more workable and more satisfactory to all concerned. Government Purchase of Gold: In a radio speech Oct. 22, the President repeated that the definite policy of the government had been to restore commodity price levels. With this level restored the next step sought would be "to establish and maintain a dollar which will not change its purchasing and debt-paying power during the succeeding generation." He announced a policy of controlling the gold value of the dollar at home by establishing a government market for gold in the United States, and authorized the Reconstruction Fi- nance Corp. to buy gold newly-mined in the United States at prices to be determined after consultation with the Secretary of the Treasury and the President. He stated also that when- ever necessary gold would be bought and sold in the world market, and this has been done. This policy aroused a storm of criticism at home and abroad, but the President re- mained firm in his support of it. On Jan. 15, 1934, he asked Congress to pass a bill transferring all gold bullion and coin in the possession.of the Federal Reserve Banks to the Treasury and to fix the upper limit of permissable revaluation of the dol- lar at 60 per cent. Furthermore, he suggested that out of the profits of any devaluation, there should be set up a fund of two billion dollars "for such purchases and sales of gold, for- eign exchange, and government se- curities, as the maintenance of the credit of the government and the general welfare of the United States may require." Congress embodied these suggestions in the Gold Reserve Act of 1934, approved by the Presi- dent Jan. 30. Silver Purchase: As another part of his monetary program the President, by an executive order of Dec. 21, rati- fied the silver agreement negotiated at the London Conference and pro- vided for the purchase of practically all newly-mined domestic silver, half to be coined and half to be deposited in the Treasury. This order was ex- pected to satisfy the advocates of silver monetization, regarded as one of the powerful groups favoring infla- tion. Alcoholic Liquor: On March 13, 1933, President Roosevelt asked Con- gress to modify the Volstead Act to permit the sale of beverages contain- ing 3.2 per cent of alcohol. He stated that the revenue derived from the licensing of brewers and dealers and from the taxes on the sale of the beverages would assist in the bal- ancing of the budget. In accordance with his request Congress enacted the so-called Beer Law of March 22 The President also went on record in favor of the repeal of the Eighteenth Amendment and his action undoubt- edly aided materially in the speedy action taken by the states in this connection. On Dec. 5, simultane- ously with the proclamation of the adoption of the Twenty-First Amend- ment, President Roosevelt proclaimed the Eighteenth Amendment repealed and expressed the hope that the people would be temperate in their use of alcoholic beverages. Air Mail Controversy: On Feb. 9, 1934, the President ordered annul- ment of all existing domestic mail contracts and directed the army to carry the mail during the emergency created by his order. It was the con- tention of the Administration that the air mail appropriation had been expended for the benefit of a few favored corporations and as a club to force competitors out of business. It was also claimed that contracts had been awarded to favored corporations by connivance and agreement. These charges were denied by former Re- publican officials and by representa- tives of the corporations, who also claimed that they had been con- demned without a hearing. When several Army aviators lost their lives on their first air mail flights, a wave of criticism of the President's order swept the country. Plans are now be- ing made to redraft the contracts and return the air mail service to private corporations under stricter governmental control. . Foreign Policy: Space does not permit a full discussion of President Roosevelt's foreign policy. Little was accomplished at the London Eco- nomic Conference, and the problem of the payment of the War debts remains unsolved. A non-aggressive policy in Cuba and at the Pan- American Conference at Montevideo advanced somewhat the doctrine of "the good neighbor." The outstand- ing act of the year was the re- "the good neighbor." The outstanding act of the year was the resumption of diplomatic relations with the Union of Socialist Soviet Rebublic. This was announved Nov.,16, following discus- sions between the President and Maxim Litnov. Speaking at the ob- servance of the anniversary of the birth of Woodrow Wilson Dec. 27, President Roosevelt declared that the time had come for the United States to announce that its definite policy was one opposed to armed interven- tion and that we did not contem- plate membership in the League of Nations. He laid down the follow- ing three-point world peace plan: (1) Every nation to agree to elim- inate over a short period and by progressive steps, every weapon of offense: (2) no nation to permit any of its armed forces to cross its own borders into the territory of another nation; and (3) every nation, with- out exception, to enter into the agreement by solemn obligation. For Lenten Days-This MIodern Cafeteria Serves SYou FreshFish .. Friday Feature Menu Fried Lake Erie White Fish......14c Baked Fillet of Haddock ........15c Fried Deep Sea Scallops.........15c All-Week Feature Stewed Milkfed Chicken........1 5c With Dumpling Dinner Steak Features Broiled Beef Tenderloin Steak.. Broiled Large T-Bone Steak .... 15C ..19c Open Afternoons & Evenings TIE TAVERN CLEANLINESS CAFETERIA Because of of sun spot come to an astronomers the fact that the period of the past years has end, McGill university predict a long, severe 338 Maynard St. mike fingerle, prop. i'A winter. I., MICHIGAN UNION BALLROOM (Continued fromPage 3) 1 eight-thirty. Butler relays only two days away. March 23.-Butler relays only one day away. March 24. -Butler relays at In- dianapolis. Five unidentified Butlers killed in rush. Names: Jeeves, Throckmorton, Adams, Morris and Bill. MARCH 25.-Doggone if it isn't raining again. The Sabbath, so conduct yourself circumspectly. March 26. - This day will probably be very near the end of the month. March 27. -This day will be nearer. March 28.-If March were Feb- ruary the chances would be three to one that this day would be the end of the month. March 29.- Swimming Nationals hnr.i n . nh in g.to nd - t hra a NEW BOOKS--The Best of Non-Fiction The Michigan Union presents Bob Steinle and the Union. Band, featuring Mary Ann Mathewson and a host Beard-The Idea of National Interest. LeGallienne-At 33........... . . Gilfllan-I Went To Pit College... . McConaughy-Who Rules America?. $3.75 3.00 2.50 3.00 Walthek-Gouverneur Morris, Witness of Two Revolutions .....,.......3.00 Delisle Burns-The Horizon of Experience 3.50 Cronyn-The Fool of Venus ... 3.00 Winton-Robert E. Lee . 4.00 Friday 9-1 Saturday, 9-12 r- ..,.. (t 1 n ; I 11 11 I - I~. J~. - I I I I