The Weather Little change in temperature today; cooler tomorrow.' -.0 .. IJ4fr igait iEiaitg Editorials Spring Parley Searchlight .. The Personality Problem ... VOL. XLV. No. 151 ANN ARBOR, MICIGAN, SUNDAY, APRIL 28, 1935 PRICE FIVE CENTS Revamped, NRA Codes Advocated G. H. Montague Speaks Before Law Students In Third Of Lectures Stresses Need For Re-Writing Codes Business Men Looking To Extension Of NRA For Economic Stability The conclusion that the NRA might well be continued if its codes are re- written so that their application to inter-state commerce only is carried out, and if the administration of the NRA is entirely revamped, was drawn by Gilbert H:.Montague inthe last of his series of three lectures given at 11 a.m. yesterday in Hutchins Hall. That the NRA is at present estab- lished on an unsound legal basis is shown, Mr. Montague declared, by the fact NRA administrators have refrained from prosecuting cases of non-compliance, because of the reali- zation that court proceedings might result in upsetting the code itself. To Apply Interstate The speaker pointed to the fact that the act requires the codes to relate strictly to transactions "in or effect- ing interstate commerce." From his own experiences as counsel for firms which objected to restrictions upon1 the grounds that they were intra- state concerns, he gave examples showing how exemptions and dis- criminations were granted these con- cerns to avoid risking tests of the le- gality of the act in court.j In speaking of the probable future of NRA, Mr. Montague declared that "75 per cent of the businesses of this country do not know what law will govern their operations after June 16," or even sooner should the Su- preme Court decide pending test cases adversely to the government. . SBusiiness Seeking Extension I For the reason that they do not want to be precipitated into the chaos which should result from the end of NRA, business men have been trying1 to secure an extension, he said. AsI with prohibition, Mr. Montague de- clared, it will be some time before the odiousness of that particular type of law administration will become ap- parent. Some business men have decried the fact that should the Supreme Court scrap the NRA we would be back un- der the anti-trust laws. This attitude overlooks the fact, he explained, that the court for the past 30 years has been expanding its interpretation of the constitution and is now progres- sive in this regard. For the revision of NRA which, if the act is not scrapped, will have to take place by June 16, Mr. Montague predicted a new legal basis which would exclude a large percentage of business concerns from its jurisdic- tion. Sees Results of Act The new act and its codes will prob- ably be re-written so as to apply only to interstate commerce, and conse- quently it may be that it will become handcuffs on those who now want ex- tension, while intrastate concerns will not be bound. If NRA could be put on a sound legal basis, Mr. Montague predicted, the administration would find that the Supreme Court, as shown by re- cent decisions and interpretations in regard to "standards of fair compe- tition," would be glad to support it and through it to incorporate healthy liberal doctrines into Democracy. Elect President Of Conservation Group Donal H. Haines of the journalism department was elected president of the newly-formed Washtenaw County Conesrvation Association at a recent meeting of the board of directors of the Association. Mr. Haines was instrumental in the founding of the society and also is largely credited with its organiza- tion. The society is aimed at creating better conditions for game in the county, cooperating with state and Federal conservation organizations, and working with the Jackson county Conservation league, the structure of ,4 n un- l.nr,. ,itili 8 ,in the .or Germany Acknowledges Plans For Construction Of U-Boats (By Associated Press) Acknowledgment at the Defense Ministry in Berlin that submarines constitute a part of the Reich's rearm- ament program capped British reports of a U-boat construction campaign Saturday, but Berlin denied that such construction had already been started. Germany's intention to build sub- marines was to be considered by the British cabinet, probably early next week. Spokesmen close to the gov- ernment claimed Germany had again broken the Versailles Treaty with a violation even more flagrant than her conscription decree. British reports said that 12 submar- ines of 250 tons each were now under construction in German shipyards, but the Berlin defense ministry denied that any orders had been placed. In Paris it was said that the sub- marine disclosure opened up the pos- sibility of a new joint protest on the part of France, England and Italy. United States officials declined to comment, having no official infor- mation that Germany was building or intended to build submarines, even though it was pointed out that Ger- man construction of U-boats would be in violation of the separate German- American peace treaty. Americans recalled that the German U-boats brought the World War closer to the United States than any other single factor. They recalled the fatal sinking of the Cunard liner, Lusi- tania, off the coast of Ireland on May 7, 1915, at a cost of 1,198 lives. They recalled, also, the startling arrival at Newport, R.. I., on Oct. 7, 1916, of the Imperial German sub- marine U-53, which had crossed the Atlantic under its own power to enable her commander, Capt. Hans Rose, to mail a letter to Count con Bernstorff, the German ambassador. , Nonchalantly setting a world rec- ord, the U-53 upped anchor in three hours after its arrival, and disap- peared again beneath the waves just inside the three-mile limit, without refueling. Two days later, oh Oct. 9, four British, one Dutch and a Norwegian steamship, were sent to the bottom or left crippled - derelicts off the Nantucket Shoals - presumably the work of the U-53. U Varsity Golf Team Defeats Purdue, 180 Johnny Fischer Stars In Opening Big Ten Meet; Shoots 4 Under Par By FRED BUESSER The Michigan golf team began its! march towards another Conference title when it shut out Purdue, 18-0, over the rain swept University Course yesterday. Drizzling weather and water soaked greens failed to prevent the Wolverines from playing excel- lent golf as they took both best ball foursomes in the morning and re- turned in the afternoon to make a clean sweep of the four individual matches. It was the opening Big Ten meet for both teams. Dana Seeley paced Michigan's num- ber one twosome, composed of Chuck Kocsis and himself, to victory over the first Purdue twosome of Harold Brewer and Bob Smith. Seeley led the morning field with a medal score of 74. To Johnny Fischer however go first honors of the day. Playing against Harold Brewer, Purdue No. 1 man, Fischer shot a 68, four under par in weather that was certainly not condu- cive to the best golf. Johnny came up to the eighth tee in even par, due to a birdie three on the sixth hole when his approach stopped two feet from the pin. He had a four on number 7, and was on the short eighth with his tee shot about 40 feet from the cup. Fischer addressed the ball with his usual speed, and putting with a perfect follow through, sank it for a birdie two. He got a par on nine, and made the turn in 35, six up on Brewer who had a 41.1 Johnny was over par on the 245- yard twelfth when he missed a 10-foot put. Brewer took the short 14th also when his tee shot landed within a foot of the pin, and was conceded by (Continued on Page 3) Sigma Xi Will Hold Initiation Banquet May 1 An initiation banquet will be held by Sigma Xi, national honorary scien- tific society, at 6:30 p.m. on Wednes- day, May 1, at the Union for 125 stu- dents and faculty members. Following the dinner, the initiation ceremonies will be conducted by Dean E. H. Kraus of the literary college. The election of officers for the next two years will also be held at this time. The main speaker at the initiation will be Dr. Charles E. K. Mees, direc- tor of the research laboratories and vice-president of the Eastman Kodak Company. Dr. Mees is one of the leading authorities in the world on photography, and the subject which he will discuss is "Some Recent Prog- ress in Astronomical Photography." Dr. Mees is a member of the Amer- ican Chemical Society, American Physical Society, American Astronom- ical Society, American Optical So- ciety, Royal Photographic Society and the Society of Motion Picture Engi- neers. He is the author of a great many contributions dealing with va- rious phases of photography, and his address here will be illustrated with Two Visiting Professors To Give Sermons' Sunday Church Services Also To Feature Talk By Dean Alice Lloyd Dean Alice Lloyd, M. Guillaume Fa- tio, visiting professor from Geneva; Prof. L. A. Mayer of the Near Eastern art and archaeology departments at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem; and Mr. Robert Stanley Ross of New York City are included in the 'pro- grams of the various local churches which have been announced for to- morrow. Dean Lloyd will speak before the, student meeting at 7 p.m. tomorrow in Harris Hall. Her subject will be "My Ideas of Education." Professor Fatio of Geneva will talk in the morning worship service at 10:45 in the Meth- odist Episcopal Church. "Education for International Understanding" will be the topic of his address. At 9:45 a.m. Dr. Roy Burroughs will lead dis- cussions in the balcony of the Meth- odist Episcopal Church auditorium on the Wesleyan movement and the in- dustrial revolution. "The Hebrew University at Jeru- salem" will be the subject of the sermon by Professor Mayer of Jeru- salem, which will be given at 11:15 a.m. in the Hillel Foundation Chapel. Mr. Ross will lecture at 8 p.m. to- day in Hill Auditorium on "Christian Science: God's Message of Hope and Healing." This talk is being spon- sored by the Christian Science or- ganization of the University. "A Minister Looks at the Church" is the topic chosen by the Rev. H. P. Marley for the devotional service at 5:15 p.m. at the Unitarian Church. The Rev. Marley will evaluate the place of the church in modern society and will discuss the question of whether it must take a prophetic at- titude or must perform only the traditional priestly functions. At 7:30 an election of the church trustees will be held. There will also be an ex- hibition of works of art of certain members and friends of the Unitarian Church. The Rev. R. E. Sayles will preach at 10:45 a.m. at the First Baptist Church on the topic, "Concerning God." At noon a student class will be held in the Guild House to discuss "The, Eighth Century Hebrew Com- monwealth." The Rev. L. L. Finch, associate minister of the First Meth- odist Church, will speak before the Roger Williams Guild at 6 p.m. at the Guild House. He has chosen as his subject Dr. E. Stanley Jones' lates book, "Christ's Alternative for Com- munism." Mr. E. C. Stellhorn, pastor of the Zion Lutheran Church will give a sermon on "The Life of Hope" in the morning service at 9:30. At 3 p.m. (Continued on Page .) Bordoni Will Play In Dramatic Season Fresh lustre was added to the Dra- matic season today with the an- nouncement of the engagement of the famous French star, Mille. Irene Bor- doni, for the Noel Coward musical revue, "Up to the Stars," to be pre- sented in the Lydia Mendelssohn theatre during the week of June 3 MIPA To Meet In Three-Day Session Here High School Journalists Will Open Conference On Thursday Muyskens To Speak At Initial Session Final Meeting On Saturday To Be Addressed By Dr. Henderson Speakers for the eleventh annual meeting of the Michigan Interscho- lastic Press Association, to be held here Thursday, Friday, and Saturday of this week, were announced yester- day by Donald Hamilton Haines of the Journalism department, who is in charge of the program for the con- vention. The M. I. P. A. annually brings to- gether representatives of all types of scholastic publications in the state under the sponsorship of the ' de- partment of journalism for a three- day session in which the high school journalists hear addresses by leading speakers and meet in round-table conferences to discuss the specific problems of their publications. Three general sessions of the As- sociation will be held. At the first of these, Friday morning, the group will be addressed by Prof. John H. Muy- skens, professor of phonetics, who will speak on "The Mother Tongue." The meeting Friday afternoon will be addressed by Lee A White of the De- troit News on a subject still to be an- nounced. At a banquet Friday night the main speaker will be Dr. William P. Lemon of the local Presbyterian Church, who will speak on "The Ad- venture of Tomorrow." Dr. William D. Henderson, director of the Uni- versity Extension Division, will be the final speaker, discussing "The Pow- er of Personality'" at the general ses- sion Saturday morning. Thursday night, . after the regis-i tration in the afternoon, a get-to- gether meeting will be held for the members of the Association. An in- formal dance is being planned as a part of the program for the night. , Advisors of the publications will act as leaders of the many discussion groups, and members of Sigma Del- ta Chi, national professional journal- ist fraternity, and honorary journal- istic societies will aid the department of journalism in the direction of the three-day session. Delegates will be housed in fraternity and sorority houses. Schedules for the discussion groups have not been completed, and names of leaders will not be announced un- til registrations for the meeting are more complete, Mr. Haines said. Dana To Give Ninth Vocational Lecture Dean Samuel T. Dana of the School of Forestry and Conservation will give the ninth of the vocational guidance lectures arranged by Dean Edward H. Kraus of the Literary College at 4:15 p.m. Tuesday in Room 1025 An- gell Hall. The lecture will deal with training for work in the field of forestry and conservation and the opportunities available there. The lecture series has been planned for seniors in the Literary College and others who- are especially interested. Prof. H. B. Lewis, director of the College of Pharmacy, will speak at the same time Thursday on the series. Council Will Take Action On Hell Week Interfraternity Group to Vote On Two Plans For Modification Will Make Decision On Fraternity Sing Election Of New President To Be Held At Meeting; Wednesday Final action on the modification of' Hell Week, the election of the Coun- cil's new president, and a decision on the possibility of instituting a fra-, ternity mass sing, will feature the business of the Interfraternity Coun- cil at a meeting to be held at 7:30 p. m. Wednesday in the Union. Alvin H. Schleifer, secretary of the Council, stated that all petitions for the presidency must be turned in by noon Tuesday as the Executive Com- mittee of the Council will meet Tues- day night to nominate three students for the position.1 The president of the Council, ac- cording to Schleifer, is not necessarily elected from the group of Council' tryouts and, therefore, he urged that fraternity men interested in apply- ing, turn in a petition. Culminating more than two months discussion and examination of Hell Week as it exists here, house repre- sentatives will vote on two modifica- tion plans. One was submitted by a specially delegated Council commit- tee, and the other by a representative, group of freshmen fraternity men.- Both plans call for a much modi- fied Hell Week and include regula- tions prohibiting paddling and other possible harmul practices, and specifi- cally limit the periods of active haz- ing. Compromise Possible The possibility loomed that if the Council cannot agree on either of the proposed plans a compromise may be effected, embodying parts of each, but fraternity leaders believe that dei- nite modification is necessary and predict little opposition to any of the proposed measures. A special committee, with George Duffy, '35, Chi Psi, as chairman, has been investigating the possibility of substituting a fraternity mass sing for the traditional Swingout, which was abolished two years ago because of indecent conduct on the part of a few seniors. The committee will report and the plan will be subjected to a vote. Dr. Van Tyne Finds New Bird Varieties ALPINE, Tex.-APl)-Four varieties of bird life new to science, and 172 other varieties, were reported for the Big Bend country here by Dr. Van Tyne, ornithologist from the zoologi- cal museum of the University of Michigan. The new varieties found here were the green fly-catcher, the red-tailed hawk, a large blue humming bird and the black-crusted titmouse, all dis- covered in or near the Chisos moun- tains. Dr. Van Tyne also found a flicker which he said was one of the rarest birds on this continent. Among the varieties listed were 96 native and 80 migrant birds. There were 15 types of hawk, six of owls, 15 of fly-catchers, one mountain plover and 16 varieties of groshawkc." French Dries Decide To Abandon Stand A fter Half Century, PARIS, April 27. -P) -After 50 years of unappreciated effort, the French prohibitionists have decided to give up trying to make the Parisians stop drinking wine. From the beginning they admitted that it was no easy task. But they thought in1885 that persistency would eventually win. Today, half a centuryafter the National League Against Alcoholism was founded, they face the fact that 145 quarts of wine are consumed annually for every man, woman and child in France. That,l they admit, is a larger quantity per1 capita than it was when their organ-I ization was founded. So from now on the League will1 concentrate against the Demon Rum< letting the wine drinkers go their way1 in peace.< One of the main reasons for giving up the battle is that the League has1 been accused of being unpatriotic. France is a nation of vineyards, and< the economic life of millions depends1 on the cultivation of the grape. Why,t as ed prohibition's enemies, who are mf lions in France, should a French league try to prohibit the drinking oft wine? The League's headquarters is on thel Boulevard St. Germain, a street floor office surrounded on both sides by sidewalk cafes. U. S. Fleet Set j For Maneuvers In Pacific Area, Five Million Square Miles Will Be Defended By Naval Warcraft SAN PEDRO, Calif., April 27. - () - A mighty United States fleet of 153 warcrafti was all set tonight for, maneuvers over some 5,000,000 square; miles of water to test the Nation's defense against attack on its Pacific area. Never before has so powerful a naval force been under sealed orders for such a series of maneuvers. From the Aleutian Islands, which. stretch far to the west from Alaska to within a few hundred miles of the Asiatic Coast, down to the Ha- waiian Islands, and from Midway Island, the outpost 1,200 miles west of Honolulu, to the American coast is the theater of operations. The 153 ships of war will move from their bases here and at San Diego and in Hawaii next week, the majority of them getting under way Monday. Next Friday, May 3, the secret problem known as No. 16, denoting it as the sixteenth in a series of annual war plans tested by the fleet for the gen- eral board of the Navy, will actually start. In Alaskan waters an invading force will be organized by vice-Ad- miral Arthur Japy Hepburn, com- mander of the fast-striking scouting force of the fleet. Along the Pacific Coast, Admiral Harris Laning, commander of power- ful battle force, will organize for de- fense. Just what the composition of these forces will be has not been disclosed by Admiral J. M. Reeves, commander- in-chief of the fleet, who is chief um- pire. There will be 12 dreadnaughts in- volved - the New York, Oklahoma, Arizona, Nevada, Pennsylvania, Ten- nessee, New Mexico, Mississippi, Ida- ho, West Virginia, Maryland and Cali- fornia. Students Protest Anti-Red Measure HILLSDALE, April 27. - (/') - Sig- natures of 200 Hillsdale College stu- dents, all of whom disclaimed com- munist sympathies, were attached to a petition sent to Lansing today, pro- testing that the Dunckel-Baldwin bill, is a violation of free speech. The petition went to Rep. James I. Post and Haskell Nichols, and asked them to oppose the bill, which would include in the category of fel- onies even remote participation in a meeting at which nverthrow of the Pollock Lectures At Closing Session Of Sehoolmasters n Publication Of Official Facts Is Advocated In Final Speech Simplification Of Balloting Is Asked Special Conference For State Teachers Is Led By Aiken By CLINTON B. CONGER A plea for better education of cit- izens to partake in government was made yesterday by Prof. James K. Pollock of the political science depart- ment, at the close of the seventieth meeting of the Michigan Schoolmas- ters' Club. He spoke on "Education For Citizenship" at a School of Edu- cation luncheon held at the Michigan League in conjunction with the edu- cators' annual meeting. Takin& for his text a statement made yesterday by President Ruthven that "a democracy is successful as its citizens are informed," Professor Pol- lock recommended first that the sys- tem of government be simplified for the sake of the voter who must make its decisions without understanding all the details of its construction. He contrasted the American "bedsheet ballots" with the situation in England where the voter elects only two offi- cers, and never more than one at a time. He further urged that there should be instituted "a reliable system for the publication of essential public facts," deploring especially the lack of publicrecords and governmental in- formation in the State of Michigan. Cites Duties of Teachers He had opened by warning that the democratic form of government was at present imperiled by the rivalry of other forms of government. . This be attributed to the lack of education for the support of democracy. "The democratic system under which we are living is now not only under fire, but, it seems to me, also under water," Professor Pollock commented. As the duty of the teachers in the schools, he cited the awaening of the pupils to their responsibilities under a democratic form of government, and the "motivating" of the future citizens to produce ideas for constructive crit- icism. "We have done nothing at all to- ward integrating our public services with the institutions of education," he concluded, suggesting that students graduating from colleges should be given encouragement to go into public service instead of turning to bus- iness only because they see no open- ing or opportunity in the field of government. The morning was occupied by the special conference for teachers held in conjunction with the meeting of the Schoolmasters' Club. The conference began at 9 a.m. in University High School with a discussion by Wilford M. Aiken of a new plan for closer co- operation between schools and col- leges: New Experiment Begun Mr. Aiken, former principal of the John Burroughs School at St. Louis, and now a member of the faculty of Ohio State University, is chair- man of the commission on the rela- tion of school and college of the Pro- gressive Education Society, working in cooperation with the General Edu- cation Board and the Carnegie Foun- dation \for the advancement of sec- cndary education to reduce difficulties in the relations of secondary schools and the higher institutions. "At no point has there been more friction than between the high school and the college," he began. A new ex- periment, started two years ago, plans to reduce this friction by having the two institutions work in harmony in- stead of mutual distrust. Thirty Schools Participate Accordingly 30 secondary schools of comprehensive distribution have been selected for the work, and 280 col- leges have agreed to accept their recommended graduates without en- trance examinations or specific re- quirements. The secondary school then had the duty of designing a cur- riculum for each student designed to fit his individual needs, capacities, and interests, instead of specific re- quirements. After his address a group of dem- onstration classes, given by students and teachers of University High School, were held, followed by dis- cussion of method and subject. i Single Ownership Of Transport Agencies Advocated By Riggs Single ownership of the three maj-; or forms of land transportation,+ trucks, busses, and railroads, was ad- vocated yesterday by Professor-Em- eritus Henry E. Riggs of the civil engi- neering department as a necessary step to meet the unregulated and destructive competition now existing between these transport agencies. Denying the assertions of Prof. John S. Worley, head of the transpor- tation engineering department, to the effect that the competition of trucks and busses has resulted in only negligible loss to the railroads, Pro- fessor Riggs quoted Commissioner Lewis of the Interstate Commerce Commision to show that the effects of this competition have reached serious showing that trucks and busses ac- count for little more than five per cent of the railroad's business were undoubtedly true, they did not show the whole picture. In the first place, he stated, there has never been in any state informa- tion to show the amount of revenue taken in by contract carriers in the trucking business, and thus these statistics are limited to the common carriers, which haul a comparatively small amount of tonnage as against the tonnage of the contract carriers. In the second place Professor Riggs stated that this five per cent accounts for the difference between profit and loss in the railroad industry. The trucks take the cream of the freight