The Weather YI r Sir igm DaiItr E di to rial18 Mostly cloudy today; tomor- row generally fair, continued cool. The Fraternities Fall Down.. Spri~g Parley Challenges... The May Festival Tradition.. VOL. XLV. No. 155 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, MAY 3, 1935 PRICE FIVE CENTS Delegates Of MIPA Meet HereToday High School Journalists Welcomed To Campus By Tayping Brumm Speaks At Opening Session General Discussions And Round Table Sessions Begin Today More than 150 delegates from high schools throughout the state were registered at the eleventh annual con- vention of the Michigan Interscholas- tic Press Association opened last night, with many more delegates ex- pected to arrive for the first gen- eral sessions today. Meeting informally in the ballroom of the Michigan Union last night, members of the association were wel- comed to the University by T. Hawley Tapping, general secretary of the Alumni Association. Donal H. Haines, geneial chairman of the convention, then introduced Prof. John L. Brumm, head of the department of journalism, which is sponsoring the meeting. Brumm Speaks Professor Brumm outlined the aims and history of the press association, and urged members attending to take an active part in the round table discussion sessions to be held today and Saturday. Informal dancing then followed for the rest of the pro- gram. General sessions at 9 a.m. today will open with a meeting in Room 316 at the Union with an address by Prof. John H. Muyskens of the speech de- partment, who will speak on "The Mother Tongue." The first group of round table ses- sions, from 10 to 11 a.m., will follow the address. While topics have been announced, and rooms chosen, lead-' ers will not be assigned to the groups until this morning, when registrations are nearer completion. Many Disusson Groups A discussion of "School Paper Ideals," led by E. R. Martin, adviser of the Dearborn High School paper, will be held in the ballroom, and an- other on "News Writing" will be held on the second floor terrace at the Union. Other discussions in the first group' will be on "Selling Advertis- ing" in Room 222, and on "Art for the Annual" in Room 223. A second group of discussions will take place from 11 a.m. to 12 noon, headed by a session on "Problems of Policy," led by Professor Brumm, on the second floor terrace. Others will be "Printing the Publication' in Room 222, and "Circulation Prob- lems" in Room 223. The afternoon meetings, will open at 2 p.m. with a general assembly to be addressed by Lee A White of the Detroit News, who will speak on "The Rising Generation." Another round of discussion meetings will follow. Banquet To ,Conclude Meetings These meetings will be sessions dealing with "The Magazine," led by Mr. Haines, in Room 222, "Feature Writing," led by Edward J. Pettit, De- troit Times feature writer, in Room 223, and "Sports Writing" led by C. H. Beukema, Ann Arbor correspondent for the Detroit Free Press, in Room 224. The advisers will meet on the second floor terrace. Today's meetings will be concluded by the annual banquet at 6:30 p.m. at the League, to be addressed by the Rev. William P. Lemon of the First Presbyterian Church, Ann Arbor. He will speak on "The Adventure of To- morrow." Following the banquet delegates who wish to visit the Student Pub- lications Building will be conducted through it, by student representatives. Governor Branded As State Dictator LANSING, May 2.--(P) -The Democrats of the Legislature roared "dictator" at Governor Fitzgerald Thursday night in answer to his charge of obstructionist tactics. George A. Schroeder, speaker of the House of Representatives and spokes- man for the Democratic members of the House and Senate, delivered a speech in which he said the governor is seeking to gather into his hands all the reins of government. It was a reply to the recent statement by the governor that an alliance of Demo- crats and Republican insurgents has Paul Philips Appointed Secretary Of Council Paul W. Philips, '36, of Kenil- worth, Ill., yesterday was appoint- ed secretary-treasurer of the In- terfraternity Council for the year 1935-36, it was announced follow- ing a meeting of the Executive Committee of the Council. Philips, who is a member of Sigma Chi fraternity, has been active in the Council organization for two years as a tryout. He was recently chairman of the publicity committee for the Interfraternity Ball. In his freshman year he was a committeeman for the Frosh Frolic. The newly-elected secretary- treasurer will serve with George Williams, '36, of Sigma Phi fra- ternity, who was elected by the en- tire membership of the Council to fill the position of president for next year at a meeting held Wed- nesday night. The retiring secretary-treasurer is Alvin H. Schleifer, '35, of Pi Lambda Phi fraternity. Ruthven Opens Model League Meeting Today Students Of More Than 20 Colleges Are To Attend Two-Day Session President Alexander G. Ruthven will open the first plenary session of" the Model Assembly of the League ofE Nations at 11 a.m. in the First Con- gregational Church, with a welcoming speech to the 250 delegates. He will preside during the election of theT president of the Assembly. . A luncheon at the Union will fol' low, at which Prof. James K. Pollock will speak on "Impressions of Gen- eva." Students of more than 20 collegesc and junior colleges in the state will attend the sessions here today and to- morrow. They will act as representa- tives of the nations in the League of! Nations at Geneva.- Meetings of the special committees on the revision of the League Cove- nant, on the Balkan problem andon munitions will be held at 2 p.m. inf the Union. About 50 delegates will attend each meeting to present theE views of the various countries on these questions. Public Invited The Council, the executive body of the League, will meet at 3 p.m. in the Union to discuss the Yugoslav-Hun- garian borderline dispute, the Abys- sinian-Italian problem, and the Franco-Italian note on Germany's rearmament. These meetings wil all be open to the public. Prof. Jesse S. Reeves will act as toastmaster at the banquet at 6 p.m. in the Union and will introduce Sir Herbert Ames, who will talk on "Hit- ler At the Crossroads." Saturday the committees will meet at 9:30 a.m. in the Union, and the Assembly will close with its second plenary session at 11 a.m. in the Con- gregational Church. Sir Herbert will act as critic of the League, pointing out suggestions for procedure and1 discussion. A final luncheon will be held in the Union for one representa- tive of the International Relations Clubs and faculty advisers to formu- late plans for next year's Assembly. Purpose Explained The' colleges and junior colleges to be represented are: Adrian, Al-a bion, Alma, Battle Creek Junior Col- lege, Bay City Junior College, Calvin, Central State Teachers' College, Flint Junior College, Grand Rapids Junior College, Highland Park Jun- ior College, Hillsdale, Hope, Jackson Junior College, Michigan State Nor- mal, Michigan State College, Muske- gon Junior College, Nazareth, Port Huron Junior College, Wayne Uni- versity, Western State Teachers' Col- lege, and the University. The purpose of the Model Assembly of the League of Nations, according to Philip Van Zile, '36, secretary- general, is to give the students an idea of the actual working of the League. In thediscussions the emphasis is not upon reaching definite conclu- sion, he maintains, but upon reveal- ing the many sides to international issues and the need of compromising. Te sTeamBeats Western State, 5-2 KALAMAZOO, May 2.- (Special) -University of Michigan's tennis team defeated a strong Western State aggregation here today in a hard match, 5 to 2. Michigan won four of the five Scholarship Is Given To P. T. Van Zile Will Provide For Study Next Summer At Union Seminar In Geneva 25 Students To Go From United States Michigan Representative To Study In Conjunction With League Of Nations Philip T. Van Zile, '36, of Detroit, has been awarded a scholarship for next summer at the Union Seminar in Geneva, according to word re- ceived yesterday by President Alex- ander G. Ruthven. Announcement of Van Zile's selec- tion was made in a letter sent to President Ruthven by Mrs. Alexander M. Hadden, vice-president of the board of directors of the students In- ternational Union Inc., of Geneva, Switzerland and New York. The scholarship provides for tui- tion in the Union Seminar, which is conducted by Prof. Pitman B. Potter, and board and lodging in the Union Villa at 177 Chemin Rigot, Geneva. The school will begin on July 4 and end about Sept. 4. Van Zile was selected as one of 25 students from the United States. Ap- proximately 25 others will go to Gen- eva from foreign countries. According to Van Zile, the holders of the scholarships will study in con- junction with the League of Nations. Members of the League secretariat will address the students, and they will have the use of the League library building. The University's representative will sail for Geneva shortly after the con- clusion of examinations in June. Van Zile has been prominent in campus activities for the past three years, and is now serving as secre- tary-general of the Model Assembly of the League of Nations, which is convening in Ann Arbor today and tomorrow. In his freshman year, we was elect- ed president of his class in the literary college. He was also a member of the editorial staff of The Daily for one year. Van Zile is affiliated with Delta Kappa Epsilon fraternity. Banquet Given For Initiates Of Phi Beta Kappa Prof. Robert Bradshaw Of University Of Illinois Is Speaker, Honor Guest The Michigan chapter of Phi Beta Kappa, national honorary scholastic organization, honored its new in- itiates at the traditional initiation banquet of the society held last night at the Michigan League. Approxi- mately 125 people, including the in- itiates, active members and their guests, attended this year's banquet. Prof: John W. Bradshaw, president of the chapter, opened the program with introductory remarks which were answered by Helen Elizabeth Aigler, '35, on behalf of the women initiates, and Edmund Keil Heitmann, '35, for the men. The guest of honor and chief speaker on the program was Prof. Robert D. Carmichael, dean of the Graduate School of the University of Illinois who addressed the group on "Number and Clear Thinking: an Aspect of Human Culture." Prof. Carmichael is himself a member of Phi Beta Kappa, the editor of the publication of the American Mathe- matical Society and author of nu- merous well-known works on mathe- matics. He based his speech upon the theme that number as the principle of order is one of. the basic concepts of civ- ilization and traced its development through the history of ancient Baby- lon, Egypt and Greece to the present day. Professor Carmichael stressed the theory of number as essential to the perception of clear and precise rela- tionships in thinking and to the de- velopment of theories of both the infinite and material in nature. This supposition is basic in the Pythago- rean and Aristotelian philosophies, as well as in that of Kepler who stated that, "God created the world accord- ing to number and in number is found the secret of the Creator's Roaring Flames In Firetrap' Consume Dilapidated Chair Injured innocence, fear. pomposity, disgust, curiosity, levity - all were in evidence late yesterday afternoon when University remen were called out to combat a laze in University Hall which threatened to consume a whole chair. The fire, wh was discovered shortly before 6 p.m., had started in some oil-soaked rags in a closet on the first flodr of the building which has long been hopefully re- garded by students as a potential bonfire. "Why," protested the sub-janitor to his superior, "them rags was hung up! We took them down - or was they hung up?" "Will it be safe to work upstairs tonight?" a timid co-ed inquired of a fireman. "We've been working all night lately." "Sure! Sure! Say, what do you do up there all night? . . . Oh, an ex- hibit." "Well, George," a professorial- looking individual temarked, "I guess we'll have to go back to work tomor- row." And then a new, batch arrived. "Where is it? ...What is it? . . Oh! . . . that chair! Is that all?" Supreme Court Participates -In Fight For NRA Optional Regulatory Code Plan Receives Chamber Of Commerce Vote WASHINGTON, May 2 -(P)- An. Administration fight for the life of NRA; centered before sharply ques- tioning members of the Supreme Court and in a Senate committee room, today caught the attention of the capital. From the bench of the high court, both liberal and conservative mem- bers shot searching inquiries at Stanley Reed the solicitor general, ' who opened the government's argu- ments on the constitutionality of NRA. Plainly the court showed its interest in the intrastate phases of the law, and in the delegation of code making authority by Congress. Favor Voluntary Codes Almost simultaneously, the Cham- ber of Commerce of the United States declared by resolution it wanted even less restriction, calling for purely "voluntary" codes. But from another business quarter, Secretary Roper's business advisory council, the Presi- dent was informed by formal reso- lution that it desired NRA extended for two years in line with adminstra- tion requests. Elsewhere in the capital principal attention was centered on the cau- tiously moving $4,000,000,000 works program; the allotment of $140,000,- 000 for May relief needs; the opening of a tri-cornered bonus battle in the Senate; and the critical attitude adopted toward the Administration by the Chamber of Commerce. Hear Bonus Proposals The Chamber, in a series of reso- lutions adopted amid some uproar, criticized almost every phase of the Roosevelt program. In almost un- precedented fashion, business men at- tending the convention refused to adopt the reports of the resolutions committee wholesale, but insisted on making some of the criticisms more drastic. The Senate during the day heard proponents of the inflationary Pat- man bonus bill and the compromise Harrison measure argue heatedly for their proposals in the Senate cloak- rooms, however. Advocates of the Vinson clan, which would let Con- gress decide later how the money would be paid, were reported to be gaining strength. Anti-Red Bill Hearing Jams House Floor Passage Of Measure Is Demanded By University Of Detroit Dean Proposal Approved By Wilbur Brucker Dunckel-Baldwin Bill Is Vigorously Opposed By Patrick H. O'Brien (Special to The Daily) LANSING, May 2.--The open hearing on the Dunckel-Baldwin bill before the House of Representatives tonight was transformed into a politi- cal debate, as former Governor Wil- bur Brucker and Frank X. Martel, Detroit labor leader, attacked each other in impassioned speeches. The ex-Governor, speaking for the proponents of the bill, charged that Martel was nothing but a pseudo. labor leader, while Martel answered that at least he was a labor leader at present, while Brucker was an ex- statesman. Both men then completely left the subject of the bill under discussion, and scored each other with random shots from their political pasts. Fifteen hundred spectators jammed the crowded galleries and floor, cheer-1 ing and booing freely as the propon- ents, mostly Legionnaires and repre- sentatives of fraternal organizations, and opponents of the bill debated be- fore the assembled legislators. Terming Brucker "Wobbling Wil- bur," Martel made the feud even more personal by stating that "the former1 governor will never, I predict, be re,~ turned to a major Michigan office." He declared that "no one could get a labor office under Brucker without the1 approval of the Michigan Manufac- turers' Association." Brucker then came back for a third time to praise the labor department' in his administration, to attempt to answer the charges of Martel, and to assert that Martel had not answered questions he proposed regarding thei Dunckel-Baldwin bill. LANSING, May 2. - (') - Advo-1 cates and opponents of the Dunckel- Baldwin anti-communism bill jammed the House. floor tonight to at- tack and defend the measure which is now pending in the Legislature. The Rev. Joseph Luther, dean of men of the University of Detroit, de- manded passage of the bill, declaring: "The issue is clear. It is God, re- ligion, morality, Americanism against' Soviet Russia. Revolt is not the path to social justice."' Carl Smith of Bay City, member of the national law and order com- mittee of the American Legion, urged the passage, and he was joined by Joseph Kruze, vice-president of the Society of World Veterans of Russia, Mrs. Agnes Dunn of Bad Axe, chair- man of the Americanism committee of the American Legion Auxiliary, N. L. Welch, Hillsdale College student, Desiderius Nagy, pastor of the Holy Cross Church of Detroit, and R. Wayne Newton, of the Michigan Farm Bureau. F o r m e r - G o v e r n o r Wilbur M. Brucker demanded that the bill be written into the statute "as a chal- lenge to those who advocate over- throw of government by force." He told the legislators: "You cannot be patriotically in- clined unless you believe this measure should be enacted." Frank X. Martel, president of the Detroit and Wayne County Federa- tion of Labor, charged the bill was not an American Legion measure, but one "written by the United States Chamber of Commerce which is hid- ing behind Legion backs." Parley To Open Here, __ Speaks In Contest Three-Day Ruthven Speaks At Meeting, Praises Of Committee First Aims -Ann Arbor Daily News Photo. DOUGLAS K. READING Speech Contest Will Be Held Here Toni 4th Representatives From Sixt Universities To Competet In Hill Auditoriumz Representatives from six middlee western universities will compete inf the Northern Oratorical Leaguez speech contest tonight in Hill Audi- orium before a distinguished com- mittee of judges from the membert schools. The first speech will be given at 8 p.m. Dr. Clare E. Grif- fin, dean of the School of Business< Administration, will be the presidingt officer. The contestants, _n the order of< their appearance, are: Douglas K.t Reading, '36, "Puppets or Patriots"; Paul Ziffern, Northwestern Univer- sity, "The Creative Citizen"; Jamest E. Doyle, Wisconsin University, "The Eagle Comes to Earth"; Paul J. Herg-1 enroeder, Western Reserve University, 'In the Service of Our Country";1 Chauncey Fay, University of Iowa, 'The Way of Life"; and Lucie Law- son, University of Minnesota, "Must It Be War?"1 The judges are professors df speech in the faculties of the competingI schools. By a rule of the Northern Oratorical League they are automa- tically disqualified from casting a1 vote in favor of their school's candi- date. The judges are: J. L. Lardner,c Northwestern University; A. T. Wea-; ver, Wisconsin University; H. S. Woodward, Western Reserve Univer- sity; H. C. Harschbarger, University of Iowa; F. M. Rarig, University of Minnesota; and L. M. Eich, Univer- sity of Michigan. The contest prep- arations have been managed by Carl G. Brandt of the department of speech of the University. Members of the local speech de- partment will entertain visiting pro- fessors at a dinner at the Union to- night. Dean Griffin and Professor- Emeritus Thomas E. Trueblood, one of the founders of the Northern Ora- torical League, will also be guests. The dinner will be preceded by a short business meeting at 2 p.m. Plans Outlined For All=Campus Sing On May Plans for the All-Campus Sing, which will be held at 7:30 p.m. Wed- nesday, May 8, on the steps. of the General Library, were announced yes- terday by George Duffy, '35, Chi Psi; chairman of the committee on ar- rangements., With the Varsity Glee Club as- sembled on the steps of the library, the Varsity R.O.T.C. Band will march from Morris Hall to the stand erected near the center of the Diagonal, Duf- fy said. While the participants assemble around the Glee Club on the library steps, the band will play two num- bers. With Prof. David G. Mattern of the music school as the leader, the Glee Club will start the singing with one number, and this will be followed by several sung by the students, ac- cording to Duffy. The band will then fill in with a short intermission, after which several more college songs will be sung by the entire group. The sing will be closed with the singing of the Yellow and Blue. Duffy requested that allbstudents make an earnest effort to be on the steps by 7:30 p.m. at the latest. The sing is being sponsored by the Interfraternity Council and has been instituted with the thought that it Faculty Group Of Sixteen On Panel Litchfield Will Preside At' Two Sessions Of Annual Event The 1935 Spring Parley will begin a three-day discussion on "Values Involved in Social Conflict at the Uni- versity of Michigan" at 4 p.m. today in the Union with members of the student body and a panel of 16 facul ty men in attendance. President Alexander G. Ruthven, who will open the first session of the Parley today, praised the aims of the gathering in the following state- ment yesterday: "The Spring Parley is designed to encourage the students to discuss fundamental problems of life. Ad- mittedly the objectives of the Parley are not easily attained becauseof the human tendency to adopt un- tested assumptions, to argue upon in- sufficient evidence, to propagandize rather than educate and to be con- cerned with superficialities rather than with fundamentals. "The development of a philosophy should be the result of dispassioned thinking, honest inquiry and unpreju- diced discussion. It follows, there- fore, that the Parley can be success- ful only as the students taking part in the discussions exhibit and pro- mote intellectual honesty, a trait which is singularly lacking in miany parts of our present civilization." The session will continue with a meeting at 7 p.m. tonight, an after- nopn and evening meeting tomorrow, and the concluding forum Sunday morning. Litchfield To Preside The 16 members of the faculty pan- el wilr'be seated together facing the general attendance at the meeting to- day and all other general meetings, and will be the "targets" for written or verbal questions raised by inquir- ing students. One member of the panel will deliver a short opening ad- dress this afternoon on the sub-topics; to provide a basis for later queries and discussion. The faculty outline of the problems presented in each of these subjects will be followed by discussion from the floor. Edward Litchfield, '36, chairman of the Parley, will preside over the meetings today and the final meeting Sunday morning. The Parley will be divided into five sections at the Saturday meetings with student chairmen presiding over a more intensive discussion of each of the five sub-topics. Wilbert Hind- man, Grad., Martin Wagner, Grad. Cyril Hetsko, '36L, Winifred Bell, '36, and Irving Levitt, '36, will lead the discussion groups on "Academic Freedom," "War," "Techniques of Social Action," "Political Philosophy," and "Racial Discrimination," respec- tively. Members Of Panel Prof. Roderick D. McKenzie, chair- man of the sociology department, Prof. I. L. Sharfman, chairman of the economics department, Registrar Ira Smith, Prof. Lawrence Preuss of of the political science department, Prof. Robert C. Angell of the so- ciology department, Prof. Lowell J. Carr of the sociology department, Prof. Preston W. Slosson of the his- tory department, Prof. John P. Daw- son of the Law School, Prof. Howard Y. McClusky of the School of Edu- cation, Prof. Burton D. Thuma of the psychology department, Prof. William A. Paton of the economics department and the School of Business Adminis- tration, Dr. John M. Dorsey, physi- cian at the psychopathic hospital, Prof. Wesley H. Maurer of the jour- nalism department, Prof. Roy W. Sel- lars of the philosophy department, Prof. H. Mumford Jones of the Eng- lish department, and William B. Palmer, assistant in the economics de- partment, will make up the faculty panel. In a statement issued yesterday, (Continued on Page 6) Conant Given A Medal For Snubbing Hitlerite Sea And Plane Sickness BowI To The Nose Bag Of Science PHILADELPHIA, May 2. - (A').- If you become car-sick, buy a bag of peanuts, throw the nuts away, and hold the bag over your nose while you breathe. It's a cure, announced today at the American College of Physicians' meetings. Try it on sea sickness and plane sickness. Any kind of paper bag will do. The treatment was found during a study of "hyper-ventilation," de- scribed by Dr. William J. Kerr, of San Francisco. uvn,,,,nH1io n hws itself in product of the human breath, holding a paper bag over the nose effectively raises the carbon dioxide, and acidity. Dr. Kerr said that holding the breath for 15 seconds should have about the same effect as the paper bag. Coronary thrombosis, the heart di- sease so fatal to high pressure brain' workers, lost a little of its fearful- ness in announcement by Dr. Paul D. White, of Boston, of certain newly- found heart troubles which have been mistaken for the thrombosis. They have been diagnosed as acute pul-