PACE MX THE MICHIGAN DAILY F-RfDAV, MARCH 20, -192G PA(~E SIX FTLTflAV, MARC'H 20, 19i6 Expect Sharp De bate Over Relief Request Message For More Funds Creates Problems Of Larger Appropriation WASHINGTON, March 19. - (A") - Prolonged and bitter debate, particu- larly in the Senate, is expected to develop over President Roosevelt's re- quest that $1,500,000,000 be approp- riated for the continuance of federal work relief. Although the requested allotment is small in comparison with the $4,- 880,000,000 supplied by Congress last year, it raises most of the controver- sial questions brought to the surface by the larger appropriation. In the debating of these questions, the Senate is expected to provide a theatre of bitter controversy. The House, which last year passed the $4,880,000,000 bill in less than a week, is not in as acquiescent a mood as a year ago and is likely to have its own innings of fighting on the question this year. In the end, however, pas- sage is insured in the House because of its overwhelming majority of Dem- ocrats. After reading the \message, most leaders privately gave up hone ^f ad- journment at any near date. Con- troversy over the tax bill has been so keen as to cause adjournment plans to be postponed, in leaders' private calculations, until nearer June 1 than May 1. With relief and taxes now providing a double-edged controversy, talk from now on will revolve around the question of whether it will be pos- sible to get Congress away from the capital in time for the national po- litical conventions next summer. Issues raised following the Presi- dent's relief message includerthe amount which should be appropriat- ed, whether it should be spent for WPA or PWA projects, work relief versus the dole, Federal versus local administration of relief, and the op- position to granting another "blank check" to Mr. Roosevelt. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from page 5) Coming Events Romance Journal Club will meet Tuesday, March 24, 4:15 p.m., Room 108 Romance Language Building. Prof. Eugene Rovillain will read a paper on "La decouverte de l'Ameri- que a-t-elle ete utile ou nuisible au genre humain, d'apres des documents ineditis du XVIe siecle." Prof. Mar, Denkinger will read a notice on "Une correspondance inedite de Sainte-Beuve avec l'editeur March Ducloux." Graduate students are cordially invited. Na val Tank Experiments Will Gitbe Begins Deeiopj 1ork Ieguin In 81 2 Fis Aetlemy f. Henry Adams Tests ship's crew who, upon instructions. Mil IPro] ti i 77 ~~m ::. :: i .' ;{ Means Of Ending Rolling Motion Of Ships would run from one side of the ship to the other, thus causing the vessel 44st Annual Convention to roll from side to side, whereupon measurements of the time and dis- Of Society To Continue I I By RALPH W . uUR Lance of the ship's roling motion! In 1872 an Englishman by the name could be taken. of W. Froude conducted some tests Tn place of a crew of men, Professori M of the resistance of three British war Adams uses a wooden frame mounted vessels to "rolling"-tested, in other at the north end of the naval tank. thropologists for concentrating their words, their resistance to the tend- Two rods extending downward from attentions on "primitive and remote ency of all ships to rock back and the frame attach to the bow and stern civilizations," and urged them to turn forth in a sidewise motion. of the model, holding it from front- their work to possible solutions of In 1936 a University of Michigan wards or backwards motion, while a present-day problems which confront professor of marine engineering, Hen- third rod connects with the mast the anthropologists. ry C. Adams, is beginning a series of and can be operated from the side of For more than a century, he said, experiments on ship models which the frame to set the ,boat rocking to anthropologists had been working in will be exact duplicaves of Lose Brit- the extent or degree desired by the the field of ancient civilization. He ish vessels and which have the pur- operator. made a plea for a more evolutionary pose of correlating the findings of Combines Resistance, Stability i concept of anthropology. Froude with the more accurate and The c;sential problem of designing The discussion period was followed scientific results obtainable in the ships so they won't roll is one of by the closing paper of the section engineering college's naval tank. combining stability with resistance to meeting, "House and Folks," given by Mark Introductory Phase rolling, according to Professor Ad- Dr. Mark Jefferson of Michigan State These tests with model British Iams. The natural roll of the ship Normal College. ships mark the introductory phase of has a certain period of time, as do the The meeting of the Academy coun- a whole succession of model ship waves which cause the rolling, and cil yesterday was held for the purpose "rolling" experiements which will ex- if the two periods correspond, and of preparing an agenda for the gen- tend over a number of years and will the boat is so designed as to afford eral business session tomorrow after- constitute the first time that such no resistance to its rolling move- I noon. experiments ever have been under- ment, then the waves will rock the Heads Reception $ taken in English-speaking countries ship back and forth in increasing The reception committee at the in a methodical and correlated man- arcs until it finally tips all the way Academy's first general formal meet- ner. over. ing last night was headed by Mrs. Professor Adams' plans include the But if the hull and bilge keel re- Alexander G. Ruthven and Mrs. constructior and testing of 256 such sist the rolling movement, or shorten George R. LaRue. models in what he calls merely "the the are through which the boat Among the leading speeches to be present series" of experiments, moves, then the stability of the ves- given today is the presidential address The naval architect may look to sel may be increasing he pointed out. following the banquet at 6:30 p.m. these experiments for more correctly- This principle is paradoxical to the in the Union tonight. Prof. A. M. designed hulls and bilge keels (vane- average person's notion of stability, Chickering of Albion College, pres- desiged huls an bile kees (vae- of teAcademy. will speak on like projections jutting out from the he continued. The common idea is ident o thec side .of ships where the hull rounds that a vessel should be stable in the Evolution in Spiders. out at the bottom); but the layman sensethat it will tend to remain con-I At the luncheon of the section on may look to these tests as a possible .tantly upright in relation to the history and political science at 1an- dltimate solution of the sole-remain- water. But if this were true, when a p ~m. in the Union, Dr. John R. Stan- ing dread of ocean travel-sea sick- wave comeswalong which in effect ton of the history departmentwill- ness. "tilts" the water on which the ship ! address that group on the Far East - Technical Difficulties is floating the vessel will tilt with the ern situation, while the economic sec- rrwater, thus producing a rolling effect tion luncheon will hear Benjamin Professor Adams' experimentalf distressing to those in the boat. E. Young of the National Bank of technique differs strikingly from that Detroit speak on "Recent Banking of the English naval architect. Froude Legislation and the Problems of the carried on his tests by utilizing the 1P Banker." __ Onler raisesDr. Korstian To Speak i li I~ ?: X 'p ,{ : ::h "" "i : rt ,Z.. J ' h t N:"i , : '4v r The 1936 Junior Girls Play zirch 26, 27 and 28 With Announce Essay Contest On 'War Is A Racket' Rules for the essay contest on "War Is A Racket," being conducted by the Student Alliance in connection with Maj.-Gen. Smedley D. Butler's talk on that subject next Thursday, were announced yesterday by Max Wend- er, '36E, who is in charge of the lec- ture arrangements. The essays should be not more than 1,500 words long, must be accompan- ied by the name, class, address, and telephone number of the writer, and must be deposited at Lane Hall not later than 4 p.m., Wednesday, March 24, according to Wender. Three contests are being held: one for University freshmen and sopho- mores, one for upperclassmen and graduates, and one for Ann Arbor High School students. Hall, to welcome new students. Re- freshments. Roger Williams Guild: St. Patrick's party Saturday, 8 p.m., Guild House, 503 E. Huron. Wear something green. Small charge for refreshments. Informal Dance for Graduate Stu- dents on Saturday evening, March 21; at the Women's Athletic Building from 9 until 12 o'clock. Admission Dr. C. F. Korstian, professor of sil- New Corporate viculture at Duke University, and one of the few outstate speakers to S M easures address the Academy, is to speak at Lax T~a~1~sa general assembly at 4:15 p.m. today '__in Natural Science Auditorium on (continued from Page 1) "What Water Means to the Forest." -'- - - --- - -' --- Last night there was, however, some of a stockholder who received a cer- question as to whether the floods in I tain amount less 16 per cent taxes the East might prevent Korstian from under present laws and who received reaching Ann Arbor today in time for twice that amount less twice the tax his speech. under the proposed laws. In the afternoon session of the This is approximately the effect the section on economics and sociology. 1 new taxes will have on stockholders called for 2 p.m. in Room B, Haven income, he stated. Hall, Dr. Samuel M. Levin of Wayne Attacking the present administra- University, chairm'n of the section, tion of corporate income taxes, Mr. will give a paper on "Marx vs. Mal- Kohler singled out Federal revenue tht:." He will be followed by Prof. agents as typifying the "bureaucrat- Robert J. McKenzie, chairman of the ic, unintelligent character of the rev- sociology department here, who will enue department." speak on "Problems of Balance in "They are now going around the Modern Industrial Society." A dis- country literally raiding corporations cussion of Professor McKenzie's paper of additional tax money," he stated, will be led by Prof. Max S. Hand- "and at the same time they frankly man of the economics department, admit their purpose as being 'to raise__ i taxes and we don't care how." We are getting back to the utter confusion of post Civil War days, he continued, during which all corpora- All I tions exert every effort to evade the tax levies; and if the present situa- F ROSH FROLIC tion continues the ultimate result must be, as after the Civil War. the PHOTOGRAPHY complete failure of the tax and the repeal of the tax laws." by a Cast and Committee of More Than Two Hundred 1 i _____________________________________________I READ THE DAILY'S CLASSIFIED SECTION rr rnw mmonor rI111 w.a i ow cur T J .0 'fi If you lose something, let people know about it. Blow your horn ! No one will blow it for you. The best place to sound off for the return of Lost Articles is the Michigan Daily Classified Section. 30cb CALL 2-1214 or is a small price to recover arti. STOP IN at the Office, les you prize 420 Maynard St. highly. I I 11 II