I The Weather Little change in temperature Thr today; cooler tomorrow. One NR VOL. XLV. No. 150 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, APRIL 27, 1935 Editorials ee And Three Make A Outlook Encouraging .. PRICE FIVE CENTS Dennison Speaks Before 4,000 At 12th Convocation Democratic Government's Right To Control Private Business Is Upheld Says Government Is Not Interfering Contends Structure Must Be Regarded As Organ Of Total Society The right of democratic govern- ment to regulate and control private business in the interests of society was upheld yesterday by Henry Stur- N gis Dennison, president of the Denni- son Manufacturing Company, Fram- ingham, Mass., in an address before more than 4,000 students and fac- ulty members at the 12th annual Uni- versity Honors Convocation. Speaking on "Business and Gov- ernment," Mr. Dennison asserted. that "one of the most common opin- ions among business men is based on the supposition that business is somehow an entirely separate or- ganism and that government should not interfere.- This was institutional- ized in the eighteenth century as 'laissez faire,' a reaction from ex- treme mercantilism but never ex- isting anywhere in a pure form." Does Not Interfere "The theory that when government taxes, levies tariffs, issues injunctions, interprets contracts, controls its cur- rency it 'interferes' with government, is wrong," he said. "In a modern in- dustrial community, everyone's live- lihood, life and happiness is so de- pendent upon business that if govern- ment did not concern itself with busi- ness, it would find little indeed to concern itself with. In such a com- munity, government either governs business or business governs govern- ment.". Mr. Dennison said that "there is no loophole by which we can escape the conclusion that the business structure must be regarded as an or- gan of total society which govern- ment must manage." He contended that the only way in which business can hope finally to escape government interference is not by "protesting and expostulating but by so carrying on its own affairs that it aids and supplements government in the attainment of its ultimate end." Dennison scored those leaders of the business world "who run things Named President Miss Edith L. Hoyle (above), a member of the University High School faculty, was elected president of the Michigan Schoolmasters' Club yester- day. Michigan Nine Beats Ypsi In Lopsided Game Kim Williams Hits Homer In 13-1 Rout; Wolverines To Meet Wisconsin Today By KENNETH PARKER Aside from demonstrating a decisive superiority over Michigan State Nor- mal yesterday here, by defeating the Hurons, 13 to 1, Michigan's baseball team showed that it is in mid-season form for today's Big Ten engagement with Wisconsin to be held at 2:30 p.m. at Ferry Field. The Wolverines scored more than a dozen runs with the aid of seven Nor- mal errors, committed but two errors themselves, and drove out eleven hits, one of them a homer by Kim Williams in the seventh, while Coach Ocker- man's club, playing its first game, could get but four hits off the com- bined offerings of Lanky John Gee and George Butler, Fisher's sophomore helpmates. Gee pitched the first five innings, allowed no runs and one hit. Butler New Officers Are Elected By Educators Concluding Sessions Of Schoolmasters' Meeting To Be HeldToday Choose Edith Hoyle As Club President Series Of Resolutions Is Adopted By Michigan Organization Members of the Michigan School- masters' Club yesterday elected to their presidency for the coming year Edith L. Hoyle, teacher of social sci- ences at the University, High School, vice-president of the Club during the past year, and the first woman pres- ident of the organization since 1924. Final sessions of the Club will be held today, consisting of the confer- ence for teachers, held at University High School, and a luncheon to be addressed by Prof. James K. Pollock of the political science department. Superintendent of Schools L. C. Moore of South Haven was elected 'vice-president of the Club for 1935 at the business meeting yesterday morning, and Prof. Frank Ellsworth of Western State Teachers College, was elected for a three-year term on the executive committee., Other important business under- taken by the schoolmasters yesterday was the adoption of a series of resolu- tions proposed by the committee, on resolutions. Foremost of these, pro-1 posed by Donald O'Hara of East Lan- sing, chairman of the committee,, called for "a statement of faith in a democratic form of government and the constitution as a defense of our institutions, and an attack on selfish interests laying a smoke-screen for their own activities by charging that1 the schools are red." The resolution1 in substance was approved by unani- mous vote. Other resolutions were adopted honoring Louis Parker Jocelyn, per-1 manent secretary-treasurer of the Club retiring after 33 years of service, together with his wife, who has as- sisted him, in his duties. MEDDLERS IN EDUCATION 1 "Meddlers in public education" were further scored by Dr. John Sundwall, director of the division of hygiene and public health, who addressed the. luncheon of the administrative teach-E ers' conference on the topic: "A Physi- cian Looks at Teacher Training.", "We must be mindful of the fact1 that meddling and interference with the public schools has been an un- varying accompaniment of their de-, velopment and growth, and more br less endemic to our democracy," he said. "What our democracy needs," he continued, "is a genuine valiant teach- ing profession made up of men and women of whom the outstanding char- acteristics will be equanimity and in-, trepidity, men and women who are capable and powerful enough to wield the whip hand when meddling sticks, its head within the doors of the public schools." Urges Longer Training He urged as the fundamental step toward this type of teacher the eleva- tion of teacher training to a profes- sional school with a length and cur- riculum similar to medicine, with a two-year general course, four years in a school of education, and a year's "interneship." Further, Dr. Sundwall commented, a new burden will be added to the public schools when the true condi- tion of democracy is realized. Since the final judges under a democracy are the people, those same people must be better educated to assume their responsibilities as a government. He closed with a plea for "a gen- uine teaching profession, unified, solid, dynamic, intrepid and com- manding," MALLOCH TREATS DEPRESSION Douglas Malloch, noted as "the poet who makes living a joy," who was the main speaker at the annual ban- quet last night, took as his topic the depression and its present aspects. He opened his speech by paying tribute to the last 50 years of prog- ress in education, characterized, he said, by "the change from the little red school house to the big red Uni- versity." The only way out of the depression, he said, was hard work, with each man solving his own problems. "Dur- ing the depression," he explained, "the price of poetry has fallen off 66 per cent, but not one poet has written his Congressman about it. The master mind we hear about in business is 'NRAAttacked By Montague In Talks Here Says Regulations Conflict With Each Other In Talks At Law Club Exercises Traces Formation Of Codes In Detail New York Attorney Gives Two Of Series At 10th Annual Founders Day By DAVID G. MACDONALD A double-barreiled attack against the NRA was unloosened yesterday by Gilbert H. Montague, prominent New York attorney, in the first two of his series of three lectures being pre- sented here this week-end in connec- tion with the 10th Annual Founder's Day Exercises at the Law Club. He spoke first at 4 p.m. in Hutchins I Hall, the second lecture being given at 7 p.m. in the Lawyers Club. Mr. Montague will deliver the third of the series, "The Future of the NRA," at 11 a.m. today in Room 100, Hutchins Hall. Describing the' "NRA in Opera- tion," Mr. Montague traced in detail the formation of one of the 700 codes of fair competition established under the act, showing that the findings of conditions within the industry were in many cases not used in drafting the codes. Codes Lack Coordination He showed further that because of this fact and because of the lack of coordination among the codes as well as because of the delegation of the executive law-making power to offi- cials ranging in importance from the president down to the lowest district administrator, it is possible for as many as 30 codes to become applicable to one concern and for some of these to be in conflict with each other. "How to keep track of these codes, supplementary codes, code amend- ments, executive orders, administra- tive orders, office orders, interpretl- tions, rules and regulations, so that before it is too late one may either comply with them or obtain from the NRA an exemption from or modifica- tion of them, is fast becoming a major problem of American business men and their legal advisors," he said. "I venture to say," he declared, "that I could find some violation in every business concern, probably under a code provision or subsequent ruling of which its owners had never heard." Blames Under Officials Mr. Montague pointed out that hun- dreds of business men, having com- plied with evey provision which seemed to affect their businesses, are suddenly coming to the realization that they are liable to heavy pen- alties and fines because of some ob- scure provision in a code which seemed to have no connection with their in- dustries. This condition he blamed to a large extent on the original poor preparation and subsequent delegation of law-making powers to a bureau- cracy of under-officials. In his speech at the banquet, en- titled "Executive Law-Making Under the Constitution," Mr. Montague de- clared that recent interpretations of the Supreme Court had shown a strong tendency to define the .limits to which executive law-making could go. In tracing the history of this ques- tion, he recalled the forty-year fight of the Supreme Court "to safeguard executive law-making against all the perils of coercive, hole-in-the-corner and particularistic executive made laws" and pointed to the fact that (Continued on Page 8) Ward Victor In Hioh Hurdles, Bests Record- PHILADELPHIA, April 26. - (P) - Willis Ward, Michigan's famous Negro athlete and all-around performer, scored a sensational victory over Phil Good of Bowdoin, Eastern Intercol- legiate champion, in the record time of 14.5 seconds for the 110-meter high hurdles. Ward pulled away to beat Good by three yards with Vir- ginia's Grover Everett, who set the former record of 15.1 last year, third. Having already startled other parts of the country with their track and field exploits, the sturdy young sons of Louisiana State University, led by "Baby Jack" Torrance, today signal- I. .I1-- - --1 ,700,000 University Appropriation Measure Is Anuroved BV Hous e 59 Elections To Phi Beta Kappa Are Announced Keys To Be Presented At Banquet Thursday Night In League Phi Beta Kappa, national honor- ary scholastic society, announced the election of 59 juniors and seniors in the literary college to the society in the program of the 12th annual Hon- ors Convocation. Phi Beta Kappa keys will be award- ed at the initiation banquet of the society Thursday night at the League. Prof. Robert D. Campbell, dean of the University of Illinois Graduate School, will speak. Those who were elected to the so- ciety are: Dorothy Gies, '36, Helen Elizabeth Aigler, Robert G. Carney, Arthur F. Clifford, Frances L. Hill, Janet Ivory, Vera Newbrough, William J. Warner, Bertha Goss, Rebecca M. D. White, Collerohe Krassaossky, and James H. McBurney, all seniors of Ann Arbor. Juniors - Ross A. Beaumont, Sam- uel D. Lipsky, John W. Odle, Hobart W. Rogers, all of Detroit; Grace I. Dartling, Glenview, Ill.; Marvin C. Becker, Newark, N. J.; James K. Dav- is, Cleveland Heights, 0.; Samuel Stearns, Dorchester, Mass. Seniors - Nancy I. Atkinson, Rich- ard C. Brandt, John A. Moekle, Wanda Novinski, Jacob I. Weissman, all of Detroit; Melvin P. Beaudette, Flint; Marion L. Bertsch,. Grand Rap- ids; Edith E. Engle, Flint; Bernard Etkind, Elmira, N. Y; Henrietta S. Fruend, Knoxville, Tenn.; Victor A. Goodicke, Riverton, Wyo. Edmund K. Heitman, Royal Oak; Meier L. Langhans, Little Valleys, N. Y.; John H. Laun, Milwaukee, Wis.; Arnold L. Lazarus, Revere, Mass.; William F. Morgan, Charleston, W. Va.; Robert A. M. Norris, Aurora, Ill.; Sidney Orkin, Grand Rapids; Mary Sabin, Battle Creek; Erna F. Schmidt, Saginaw. Libby R. Selin, Iron River; Erwin S. Simon, Lansing; Charles C. Spang- enburg, Wetherfield, Conn.; Adam H. Spees, Ferndale; Louis W. Staudt, Harvey, Ill.; David W. Stewart, Sagi- naw; Kathryn E. Vancklasen, Grand Rapids. Seniors in the school of education -Helen Crawford, Port Clinton, O.; Hildegarde Foss, Dunkirk, N. Y.; Mary Elizabeth Smith, Grand Rapids; Leon S. Waskiewicz, Detroit. Graduate school - John F. Cuber, Bangor; Rolfe A. Haatvedt, Michigan, N. D.; Chin-Chih Jao, Chungkink, China; Charles C. Walcutt, Evanston, Ill.; Everett T. Welmers, Holland. Monroe Hioh Winis Debate Championship Negative Team Keeps Title In 18th Michigan Debate Association Contest Before a wildly cheering crowd in Hill Auditorium last night Monroe High School successfully defended the negative side to win the eighteenth annual state championship debate of the Michigan High School Forensic Association. The members of the negative team were John McCallister, Walter Meir and Alda Rolph. The affirmative team included Mar- jorie Wilson, Sidney. Davidson and James McCulloch of Flint Northern High School. The subject of the debate was "Re- solved: That the Federal Government Should Adopt the Policy of Equalizing Educational Opportunity Through- out the Nation by Means of Annual Grants to the Several States for Public Elementary and Secondary Educa- tion." Prof. Clarence T. Simon of Northwestern University, Prof. G. E. Densmore and Prof. J. M. O'Neill, both of the department of speech and general linguistics were the judges. Their decision was unanimous. John McCallister outlined the case Teaching Of 'Isms' Urged For College Courses By Wirt GARY, Ind., April 26. -(/P) - Col- lege courses in Communism, Fascism, Naziism and Socialism as well as the present economic order were advo- cated tonight by Dr. William A. Wirt, who stirred up a tempest in 1934 with charges that certain "brain trusters" were plotting a revolution. Dr. Wirt believes that any student examining intelligently the various economic systems would end by choos- ing the existing order. He recommended that classes be taught by "out-and-out" proponents of the divers "isms."c "They would put up their strong- est arguments," he added, "and frank- ly present all their data. . "If advocates of the present eco- nomic order cannot put up a double- entry balance sheet that can compare with the others, then there is some- thing radically wrong with them or the present order.1 "Let the student act as the judge," he urged.1 $47,000 Given To University By Foundation Regents Accept Gifts And Make Appointments In MonthlyMeeting The acceptance of various gifts, several appointments and the grant- ing of leaves of absence occupied the major portion of yesterday's regular monthly meeting of the Board of Re- gents. The Regents accepted a gift of $47,- 500 from the Rockefeller Foundation to be used to support a fluid research fund in humanities. This sum will be paid over a three-year period be- ginning July 1, 1935, and ending June 30, 1938. $25,000 First Year According to the terms of the grant. the University will receive $25,000 during the first year, $15,000 more the second year, and $7,500 during 1937-38. A gift of $500 from the Carnegie Institute, of Washington, D. C., to be used for the expenses of Prof Lee R. Dice of the zoology depart- ment and his party was also ac- cepted. Parke-Davis and Company pre- sented the University with $1,200 to be used for research work in immun- ity in general, under the direction of Dr. Reuben L. Kahn, of the Univer sity Hospital. Another $1,000 wa received from the Aaron Mendelssohn Trust which will be used for the same purpose. Accept Bronze Bust The Regents also accepted the gif of a bronze bust of President Alex- ander G. Ruthven. The bust ha just been completed by Carleton W Angell, artist of the University Mu- seums, and it will probably be place in the main lobby of the museum building. The name of the donor was withheld. Mrs. William Waltz of Ann Arbor was appointed to fill the vacancy or the Board of Governors of the League which was created by the resignatior of Mrs. Ellen S. Stanley. Mrs. Stan- ley resigned to become manager of the League. Mrs. James W. Robinson of Royal Oak, Mich., was also named to fill a vacancy on the board of governors of the League. She replaces Mrs Thurlow Coon of Detroit, and her term will expire in May, 1938. Leaves Granted The Regents also appointed Thom- as D. Hinshaw honorary associate curator of Avian astrology, and Prof. Theodore H. Hubbell of the University of Florida zoology department honor- ary associate director of orthoptera. Leaves of absence were granted to the following faculty members: Dr. Robert H. McDowell, research associate in Mesopotamian archoeolo- gy, from May 1, 1935, to May 1, 1936. Proposes $3,200,000 Out Of General Fund, Rest From Sales Tax Bill Passes 79 to 6, Is Sent To Senate Legislative Grant Boosted $500,000 As Fitzgerald Agrees To Conpromnise LANSING, April 26. - (A) - The House passed a bill today providing an annual appropriation of $3,700,000 for the University of Michigan. Of that amount $3,200,000 would come from the general fund and $500,- 000 from sales tax revenues. The bill was reported by the House ways and means committee recommending a total appropriation of $3,200,000. It was amended upward on motion of Representative James G. Frey, (Rep, Battle Creek). The vote on the bill was 79 to 6. The measure goes to the Senate. The $3,700,000 amount is $100,000 less than was proposed in the bill as originally introduced. Pass M.S.C. Bill Also The House also passed and sent to the Senate a bill giving Michigan State College $1,300,000 a year for general operation and $178,609 for extension work. The State College total was boosted from $1,300,000 to $1,478,000 with $200,000 of additional aid still in pros- pect from the sales tax. In the case of the University, it is understood that Gov. Fitzgerald has agreed with the Regents that he will approve the compromise amount.- It :s, however, more than $300,000 less han the Senatte has scheduled in the bill approved and sent to the House. Conferences may be necessary to iron out the discrepancy. The State College grant, however, s $126,000 in excess of the amount 'fixed by the Senate and a deviation rom the old relationship which fixed he East Lansing total at one-third of that for the University. Approve Other Bills Other appropriation bills approved 3y the House included: Hospitals, $4,490,000. Psychopathic Hospital, $94,420. State Sanatorium, $270,675. Advocates of sales tax exemptions vere starting a new drive for Legis ative approval. A group of House members, made 1p of both Democrats and Repub- icans, moved to start over again on z more impressive scale. A bill which sad passed the House exempting taple foods and certain other articles vas recalled from the Senate, where t is lodged in the taxation committee. 'he House group plans to send it )ack to the friendly House taxation ;ommittee and amend it there to in- Alude not only designated food staples )ut articles -used in agricultural or ndustrial production. The House majority acted because A the presence on the calendar of a Renate bill to transfer all sales tax evenues to the general fund. This vas part of the administrative pro- ,ram. The measure would amend he same law affected by the House All proposing exemptions. Oriental Society Elects Officers In Last Session The American Oriental Society losed its three-day meeting here yes- erday with the election of Prof. Wil- .iam A. Albright, of John Hopkins Jniversity, as president. Prof. Leroy Waterman of the Divis- .on of Oriental Languages and Litera- tures, and Prof. Edgar Sturtevant, of Yale, were named vice-presidents. Prof. Leroy C. Barret, of Trinity Col- lege, Hartford, Conn., was chosen correspondingsecretary, while Dr. Ludlow Bull, of the Metropolitan Mu- seum of Art, in New York City, was elected recording secretary. The new treasurer is Prof. John C. Archer, of Yale, and the librarian is Prof. Andrew Keog, also of Yale. New editors of the Journal, society maw ml - their own way without interference" took up the task in the sixth and fin- and explained that their intensive ished without difficulty, giving but training had set such a tendency into one run and three hits, and striking a fixed habit pattern. out six. Condemns Conserva'tism John Johnson, who has been ex- He openly condemned both the tremely tough for the Wolverines in hard-shelled conservatives and those games past, did not trouble Michigan who would produce a new order by batters today. He was replaced in first resolving the old into chaos. the seventh by Bob Goggins, after He pictured each camp as praying, having allowed 11 runs, and 8 hits! "Those, oh Lord, who are in political in 6 innings. Only four of the count-j control are not us - out with them." ers were earned, however, one coming Mr. Dennison said the the temp- in the first when Captain Russ Oliver, orary joining of forces by the right who led the Michigan attack with and left wings is a common political three hits out of five attempts, singled phenomenon and "constitutes, in this to bring in the first of four runs he' country today, a threat to sane pro- drove in; and three more were record- gress which should make us ex- ed in the third as a result of Clayt tremely watchful." Paulson's triple with two on and Oli- He predicted that if the United ver's single immediately after. States were to escape social and po- Five runs in the fifth and two in litical catastrophe, it will be because the sixth were made possible by four the middle-of-the-roaders have cour- Ypsi errors. Michigan's last two runs age, leadership, energy, and keenness, were earned however. Williams, the and above all, courage. second man to face Goggins in the After his address, Dr. Dennison was seventh, drove a pitch on the ground given the honorary degree of doctor between left and center field, and of law. with fast legging made four bases on President Alexander G. Ruthven the hit. In the eighth, Earl Meyers was the presiding officer of the Con- singled off the shortstop's chest, went vocation and delivered a short ad- to third on Oliver's single, and came dress, congratulating the honor stu- home when John Regeczi drove to dents deep center. Michigan performed well in the l C i Hillel Sponsors Oratorical Contest Announcement of an elimination oratorical contest sponsored by the Hillel Foundation was made yester- day by Irving F. Levitt, '36, student director of the Foundation. Jewish subjects are to be made the topics of the speeches, which will be limited to ten minutes each. The two winners, one man and one woman, of this preliminary contest are to be sent, all expenses paid, to the Covenant Club in Chicago, where field. One of the two errors was chalked up against John Gee when he threw the ball away trying to catch a runner off second. Ford committed the second error, dropping a pop foul, after a hard run to get under it. (Box score may be found on page 5). 15 N.S.L. Picketers Held In New York NEW YORK, April 27.- {P) - Fif- teen members of the National Student League were arrested today as half a I hundred sympathizers of discharged