The Weather lViortly tliiuly, r xin or iow In s itherast toda:v; tomnorrow ic, Aep Ap -.-ahk, ritx Editorials Future Of The Student Senate .. . At Withmn Are We LLugfiniz?. VOL. XLVI No. 121 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, MARCH 20, 1936 PRICE FIVE CENTS England Sanctionls Proposal F o u r - Power Conference To Discuss Hitler's Plan To Be Held In May France Approves London Program Germany To Be Requested To Submit Soviet Pact To Hague Court LONDON, March 19.-(IF)-The British cabinet agreed tonight to a four-power proposal for an interna- tional security and economic confer- ence to consider Adolf Hitler's peace proposal. (The French cabinet approved a report of the plan submitted by For- eign Minister Pierre Etienne Flandin, and semi-official sources said this meant full approval of the four-pow- er plan formulated in London.) Under the plan, Germany also would be asked to submit the French- Soviet mutual assistance pact to the Hague Court, which would decide whether the treaty violated the Lo- carno agreement and thus gave Ger- many the right to remilitarize the Rhineland. British To Explain High British quarters disclosed that if this demand were carried out France was willing to withdraw her demand for evacuation of German troops in the Rhineland. The plan was formulated by delegates of Brit- ain, France, Italy and Belgium. The British government was expected to make a full statement about it in the House of Commons about 3:30 p.m. tomorrow. The development, the major one of six days of negotiation and dickering among worried European powers, overshadowed a formal indictment of Germany by the League of Iations council today as a violator of the Lo- carno and Versailles treaties. The conference probably would be held in May. Germany, however, must consent to international forces policing the remilitarized Rhineland zone during the negotiations. Condemns Germany LONDON, March 19. - (P) -- The Council of the League of Nations heard a spokesman for unrepentant Germany defend her remilitarization' of the Rhineland today and then un- animously adopted a resolution con- demning her for violation of the Lo- carno and Versailles treaties. Following the vote a high British authority said the four Locarno mem- bers had tentatively agreed on an in- ternational conference. The new international conference would discuss limitation of arma- ments, economic problems and sub- mission of the Franco-Soviet military pact to the Hague peace court. The basic points of the Locarno members' proposal were reported to have eliminated France's previous de- mand that Germany must abide by the court's decision even if it means withdrawal of the Nazi troop from the Rhine zone. Germany, however, must consent to Hagood Showdown Seat For Tomorrow WASHINGTON, March 19. - () - A final showdown in the case of Maj. Gen. Johnson Hagood, whose refer- ence to WPA funds as "stage money" stirred a two week's storm in Con- gress, has been scheduled for tomor- row - involving either his restoration to active duty or his retirement. The White House announced to- night that President Roosevelt had granted the former commanding gen- eral of the eighth corps area a hearing through the intercession of an un- named third person. Political observers here attached official significance to this meeting, because of repeated reports from well- informed sources, that Hagood might answer the discipline imposed on him for his remarks by entering politics in South Carolina, his native state. A report that he might possibly op- pose Senator Byrnes, (Dem., S.C.) a staunch administration man who is up for reelection, brought from the South Carolinian a statement that he considered this highly unlikely. Byrnes was one of the general's most active defenders. Kohler Praises New Corporate Tax Measures Claims Levy Should Stop Irregular Administration Of Income Tax Laws The tax on undistributed corporate profits proposed by President Roose- velt and now before Congress received support and praise yesterday, and the present administration of the Federal corporation income tax was branded as "almost criminal" by E. I. Kohler, president of the American Accounting Association, at a lecture in the Romance Languages Building. Although Roosevelt's original pro- posal has degenerated into a confused and feeble measure in Congressional hands, in the opinion of Mr. Kohler, the tax will be no heavier a burden on corporations and should eliminate much of the maladministration of the present corporate income tax laws. As illustration of the workings of the proposed law, Mr. Kohler cited the example of a large corporation which earned substantially more than $400,000 last year, distributed half of its income to stockholders, and payed approximately 16 per cent of its income to the Federal govern- ment in the form of net income, ex- cess profit and capital stock taxes. With this corporation declaring the same proportion of its income as divi- dends under the proposed tax, the lat- ter would apply only to the half which was left in the business, he con- tinued. Since the tax is 33 and one- third per cent-twice the present levies-and since it applies to only one-half of the concern's net in- come, the corporation would pay just about the same amount. Mr. Koher pointed to the similari- ty existing between the next revenue 'continued on Psge B O'Shea Jailed For $27,700 Embezzlement Street Railway Funds Are Added To Shortage After Department Audit DETROIT, March 19. -City offi- cials today added $27,700 of street railway funds to a shortage in city accounts already estimated at more than $450,000, and jailed James J. O'Shea, vice-president of the National Bank of Detroit, in a cell at the Fed- eral Detention Farm at Milan, accus- ing him of having conspired with Harry M. Tyler, assistant budget di- rector of Detroit, who committed sui- cide last week, to loot city funds passing through their hands. Charles N. Williams, assistant city treasurer, announced the new short- age following an audit of transpor- tation department accounts, after the United States marshal's staff had al- ready started O'Shea on his way to confinement. These accounts were handled by Tyler along with the trust funds in which the initial shortage of $349,000 and later discrepancies amounting to more than $100,000 were discovered. To date assets totalling $156,000 hnin hpp rarnar - a fnm rP r nfo Guthe Begins First Session Of Academy 41st Annual Convention Of Society To Continue With ManySpeeches Stanton To Speak On Far East Today Museum Director Opens Meeting With Discussion On Anthropology The Michigan Academy of Science, Arts, and Letters, which convened here yesterday to begin the three-day session of its 41st annual meeting, will continue here in its full extent today and tomorrow, after prelim- inary meetings of the section in an- thropology, a business meeting of the Academy's council, and the annual re- ception held yesterday. Section meetings for papers and discussion in 11 of the 13 sections will be held today, while the remain- ing two groups, mathematics and philosophy, will dispose of all their, papers Saturday. Guthe Speaks 200,000 Desert Homes As Worst Flood Of Century Rising Death Tc Ravages ill Exceed, East, s 100 Students Are Frantic When Unable To Reach Homes In Flood Area TelephonesDead; I elegraph Down Daily Besieged By Anxious Requests For News Of I Stricken Territory By FRED WARNER NEAL More than a score of University students from flood-stricken Pitts- burgh and New England were frantic last night as the damage toll mounted in their home towns and they were unable to get in touch with their families. Only one student, Florence Lucas, Deaths Rise As Floods Sweep Through East --"°39, could be found who succeeded in Prof. Carl E. Guthe, director of the reaching Pittsburgh by telephone last University Museum of Anthropologynr a lthough syveleAn Abo opened the Academy's first session night, although several Ann Arbor at 2 p.m. yesterday with a paper on persons talked to relatives in Penn- "Anthropology and Modern Life," sylvania earlier yesterday and Wed- in which he discussed the part an- nesday. thropologists have to play in the civ- Last night students were unable to ilization of today, describing the field reach either Pittsburgh or New Eng- as the key to the complexities of the land by telephone or telegraph. Most present world. telephone and telegraph wires were "The information obtained by phys- down, they were told, and where ical anthropologists is of great value communications still survived the in studying such problems as race surging floods, wires could only be mixture, race prejudice, criminology used for emergency calls. and eugenics," he told the section The Daily was besieged all night headed by Prof. R. Clyde Ford of with anxious requests for news of Michigan State Normal College. "To- the flood situation, and frightened day the relation of the child to the voices reflected disappointment when school is also being discussed. The told that the only news, vague as it physical and psychological changes was, was bad news. during growth from infancy to ma-o turity are of -equal interest to the an Radio Plea Made thropologist and the educator." A plea, made over the University He pointed out that anthropology broadcasting system yesterday morn- can be of great service to nations ing by Irving Levitt, '36, of Pittsburgh, having under their control other for persons in stranded areas to com- races, such as, in the case of the I municate with relatives here was be- United States, the natives of the Car- lieved to have brought no results. ibbean nations, the colonials in the Students whose homes were in spots Philippines, and the Indians within reported under water were fearful of the borders of the United States. the welfare of their families and PresntsNewViepoit !anxiously kept trying both telegraph Presents New Viewpoint and telephone. A number of students "Anthropology is able to present a who sent telegrams to their families new point of view which is often re- last night had not received answers freshing on many social problems early this morning and had just about which are particularly our own," he given up hope of communicating with asserted. "The great confusion which their parents. exists because of the inability to dis- Miss Lucas, who talked with her tinguish between "human nature" and mother, Mrs. Anthony Lucas, in Pitts- automatic habits leads to much sub- jective rationalization on such mat- burgh shortly after 7 p.m. yesterday, teatiaize antinfon suc -'reported that it was raining hard ters as marriage and the family, eco- there, and that the flood, thought nomics and capitalism, religion, mor- earlier in the day to be receeding, was alsagain rising. The huge steel city "Through an objective study of was in absolute darkness, her mother groups of men, it is possible to obtain told her, all electricity and gas being a more complete picture of all the shut off. All private telephones were many closely related activity patterns cut, she said, and permission had to which combine to form our civiliza- be obtained before outgoing telephone tion, and to secure a better appre- calls could be made. Although her ciation of the fundamental natural home, near the edge of the city, was and social forces which permit man- still above water, great flood areas in it J Roosevelt Asks 3 Million Relief Fund For Destitute Victims In Area 10,000 Are Trapped On Island In Ohio Washington Endangered By Threatening Rise Of Potomac River (By The Associated Press) The east's greatest flood of this century .- its death toll already be- lieved to exceed 100 -rolled on un- checked in a dozen states Thursday night with thousands of persons flee- ing from newly threatened communi- ties and roads in ravaged sections fighting to combat disease, hunger, and other perils. Whole cities, towns and hamlets were battered by the paralyzing force of the greatest deluge in recent his- tory of the eastern states. Casualty lists anct damage tolls mounted hourly as flood tides swept desolation over vast areas from the Ohio Valley to Maine. Already the total of wrecked property has passed the $150,000,000 mark. 200,000 homeless Red Cross officials estimated 200,- 000 or more persons were homeless. President Roosevelt joined in their appeal for an emergency fund of $3,000,000 to feed, clothe and shelter them. Pestilence, hunger and widespread suffering followed in the wage of suffering followed in the wake of the raging rivers. Convulsed by the flood waters that left Pittsburgh a silent city of dis- aster, the Ohio River thundered down the West Virginia border, pouring into Wheeling and Wellsburg, W. Va. WASHINGTON, March 19. -- (P)-- With muddy waters lapping near the White House grounds, President Roosevelt today swiftly assumed the role of commander-in-chief of the Federal forces fighting against the ravages of floods sweeping the East. Within the space of an hour the Chief Executive took three actions. He postponed for at least 24 hours Ann Arbor's Red Cross chapter will begin a drive today to raise $520, its share in the $3,00.,000 re- lief funds the nation will hurry to 38,000 homeless families in flood-stricken areas of the South and East. A local committee will swing into action this morning, L. E. Ayres, chairman said, its headquarters being in the Red Cross office of the Chamber of Commerce building, telephone 2-1647. -Associated Press Photo. A mounting death toll was counted as a result of the devastating flood waters. This aerial photograph shows how high water from the rain-swcllen Patomas and Willis creek submerged Cumberland, Md., rising to second stories of buildings. The .Flood Situation In Brief (By, The Associated Press) WASHINGTON - President asks $3,000,000 for Red Cross, with esti- mated homeless at 200,000; Potomac flood visible from White House; dikes protect monuments. WEST VIRGINIA - Floods from Pennsylvania rush upon large cities with vast damage; many lives lost; Wheeling inundated and isolated. WESTERN PENNSYLVANIA - Floods subside at Pittsburgh, Johnstown and other points. Death toll may reach 44; damage $100,000,000. Trans- portation, communication still paralyzed. EASTERN PENNSYLVANIA-50,000 homeless; property damage in Imillions; many cities severely hit; Susquehanna carries fresh threat. OHIO -- Thousands flee homes; factories heavily damaged as Ohio River reaches crest; preparations made for valley's worst flood. MARYLAND - Swollen Potomac takes four lives, buries Cumberland under tons of slime; $5,000,000 damage in valley. NEW JERSEY - Traffic crippled, hundreds driven from homes with Delaware river on rampage. NEW YORK - 4,000 homeless, two dead, many roads blocked, Bing- hamton faces eater shortage; relief mobilized as waters slowly recede; rush of water expected to sweep down Finger Lakes watershed Friday; central New York prepares. MASSACHUSETTS - Thousands homeless, factories idle; traffic halted; Bsoton faces milk rationing. CONNECTICUT --Hartford faces worst flood in history -Connecticut River still rising. VERMONT - National Guard called out at four places to aid marooned families and guard abandoned property. NEW HAMPSHIRE -Ice jams dynamited in overflowing river; towns isolated, roads closed. RHODE ISLAND - Blackstone Valley flooded; sand bags placed around Pawtucket city hall. VIRGINIA -Richmond guarded by 2,000-foot dike as James River threatens disastrous flood. allow international force to the demilitarized zone during tiation for a new European treaty, it was reported. police nego- peace Ellis Cowling Gives Talk On Cooperatives The Rev. Ellis Cowling, connected with the Waukegan, Ill., cooperative movement, addressed more than 100 students and townspeople last night in Lane Hall on the formation of a cooperative association in Ann Arbor. Mr. Cowling is the minister of the Thorntown, Ind., Church of Christ. Introduced by Miriam Hall, Grad., chairman of the social study and ac- tion committee of the S.C.A., Mr. Cowling recommended the "five! Rochdale principles" in forming such j an organization. The rules, set down' in England in 1842 and evolved over a period of a hundred years, are: 1. Open membership to all who wish to join the organization. 2. Divi- dends to be paid on basis of patron- -- - V "1-'tvienrr u nrl Th , kind to live in groups," he concluded. In the discussion following Guthe's speech Prof. Leslie White of the an- thropology department created a mild furor when he arose to criticize an- (Continued on Page 6) Borah Begins Campaign For Stable Dollar YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio, March 19. -(P)-Opening his Ohio presiden- tial campaign here tonight, in the' center of the United States steel in- dustry, Sen. William E. Borah, (Rep., Idaho), declared himself in favor of a "stable dollar" and "complete and effective neutrality." In making a bid for Buckeye state delegates to the national convention, the Idaho senator also declared in' favor of retaining "the American market for the American farmer." He approved the cooperative sys- tem of farm marketing and said he favored speedy enactment of thec commodities exchange bill now before Congress. . Striking at the New Deal policy of curtailing production as a means of relieving agriculture, Senator Borah said he did not "believe in the Phil- the downtown section were roped off, she said. Water 18 Feet Deep Miss Ruth Barnett of Pittsburgh,: who came here a week ago to visit Mr. and Mrs. Harry- Breniser of 727 East University Ave., called her home yesterday and said she was informed that the water in Pittsburgh down- town areas was more than 18 feet deep in places. The city was with- out any kind of communication or transportation, she said, expressing, the fear the waters were deepening. The city onlywhada drinking water supply for one more day, she §aid. D. Lucille Johnson, '36, of Freeport, Pa., talked with her father, A. M. Johnson, late Wednesday and re- ceived the report that her home town was in places 10 feet under water. An island in the nearby Allegheny River, was completely submerged, Mr. John- son said, and the city was deprived of gas, light and water supply. Rose Pseil, '39, also communicat- ed with her parents in Pittsburgh and was told that there were no electric lights, telephong or street car service, but that gas and water could be ob- Dove Code Drafted In Washington For Amorous Students WASHINGTON, D. C., - A code intended to prevent love from dis- placing learning has been drafted by, 12 students - six men and six women - at American University. The dean of the college of liberal arts found it necessary to take al hand when love predominated over learning to such an extent that stu- Drama Season Inauguration Is Set ForMay 18 Dates for the seventh annual spring Dramatic Season to be directed by Robert Henderson were announced yesterday by Daniel L. Quirk, Jr., chairman of the Dramatic Commit- tee. As in previous years, the plays will be presented for five weeks in the Lydia Mendelssohn theatre, opening Monday, May 18. The closing day of the Dramatic Season will be held on Commencement Day, June 20. Six New York productions of the current year have been scheduled for his southern fishing curise, sum- moned 4 conference of his special Flood Aid Committee, and appealed in an executive proclamation for $3,- 000,000 in flood-aid contributions to the American Red Cross. Declaring that 200,000 people al- ready had been driven from their homes in 11 states, he urged "our people to contribute promptly and most generously, so that sufficient funds may be available for the relief of these thousands." The most serious situation arose at the Wheeling Island in the middle of the broad Ohio, where most of the 10,000 inhabitants were trapped in their homes by the avalanche of water. Houses were ripped from their foundations, tumbled pell-mell down- stream. Clear Island Observers reported two of them car- ried two men gripping to the rooftops of the doomed buildings. Rescuers estimated at the emer- gency headquarters set up in the court house that approximately 1,000 per- sons had been taken off the island, which is a part of the city of Wheeling and situated about a half mile from each shore. JOHNSTOWN, Pa., March 19. - (O) - Prostrated by the worst flood since the disaster of 1889, Johnstown to- night was a scene of despair, hunger and suffering as relief workers start- tained in some areas. dents' grades were dropping very noticeably. Suggestions from the code are: Announcement Made 1. Not to sit at the same table in ~ the library or reading room. Of Senior Secretaries 1h irr 1ra onas- Perm Snenirer es - 2. Not to sit together in cars. S Permanent secretaries for the lit- 3. Not to be together at all dur-