The Weather Mostly cloudy today and to- morrow; snow tonight or tomnor- row; no decided change in tem - peiture. YI r A6F :4Iaitt3 Editorials The Commerce Committee's Investigation Professor Schaper Is Exonerated .. VOL. XLVIIL No. 96 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, FEB. 16, 1938 PRICE FIVE CENTS Eight Hundred Road Experts Convene Here In Conference Van Wagoner Sees Double Auto Traffic Volume Within Next 20 Years Tax Problem Topic Of First Meeting Peter I,' Soviet Film Venture, Hailed As Cinema Art Triumph Coming Picture At Lydia Mendelssohn Praise ( By Russian Instructor Here By ROBERT PERLMAN "Peter I," the Soviet film that will appear this week-end at the Lydia Mendelssohn, was hailed yes- terday as "an artistic and fascin- ating presentation of Russia's first modern Czar and his times" by Mrs. Lila Pargment of the Russian de- partment. With an historical accuracy and an entertaining touch the picture tells the story of the progressive des- pot. Peter the Great, who brought to By WILLIAM J. ELVIN the feudal, oriental Russia of 1700 Eight hundred highway engineers the culture and industrial organiza- and traffic experts gathered yester- tion of Western Europe, Mrs. Parg- day in the Union to hear opening-day ment said. speeches in the thee-day meeting of the Michigan Highway Conference Peter's reorganization of the no- held under the direction of the Col- tlligenaccordather withaenergy blood, he lege of Engineering Iellignerahrhnbo, she Legesof Engineeringpointed out, was bitterly resented and With Prof. Lewis M. Cram of the opposed by the nobles, as shown in engineering college presiding, the con- the picture. This democratic Czar ference heard Federal and State high- who chose a peasant for his prime way experts, including State Highway minister, an African Negro (grand- Commissioner Murray D. Van Wag- father of the poet Pushkin) as a oner, discuss the present and future costs of the State's 120,000 miles ofl streets and roads. , T Costs of highways constructed and Tro ps T w rt maintained in order to handle the double volume of traffic nredicted for M exican M ob's the future, Commissioner Van Wag- oner said, will be limited only by "the Lh At te p continued willingness .of motor ve- 1( hicle, owners to pay the shot." Expects Increased Volume The Highway Planning Survey,Ravisher0 g 1t ear Commissioner Van Wagoner said, es- Old Girl Rescued By timates that within the next 20 years, L,.a. when traffic volume will double, aver- Local Military Officials age annual revenues from the motor vehicle taxes will increase possibly TIJUANA, Mexico, Feb. 15.-(/)-A one-third, frenzied mob of 800 men and women The trend in collection of highway demolished a jail, fired a federal revenues,:he continued, has been away building, threatened jailers with fromlocally-collected property taxes hanging. and exchanged bullets with to state-colleted motor vehicle rev- soldiers today in a futile at tempt to enue's and federal aids. Local sup- lynch the man who ravished and port for Michi'an highways, he de- killed an eight-year-old gil. clared. has almost entirely disap- Nearly 1.000 shots were fired be- ered .' 'ween the rioters and soldiers of a .H.S. Fairbank, chief of the division, einforced garrison. Six persons were of information, U.S. Bureau of Public wounded and six others injured by Roads, declared that most highway trampling. movenleins are very short. "The kind General Manuel Contreras, coin- of traffe for which our road system nander of the military zone here, hould be designed,' 'Mr. Fairbank fried out repeatedly to the mob that stated, "is a traffic that moves short "justice will be meted out to this distances, not long-a traffic that prisoner!" moves in great volumes in and out of He referred to a young soldier, cities. but dwindles to much smaller ue'tioned with several other men proportions as cities are left behind." 'fter the body of Olga Comacho, 8, The financial support of every road vas found yesterday. General Con- and street, G. Donald Kennedy, dep- 'reras said the man confessed. uty commssioner in charge of bus- Police headquarters and the tem- iness administration in the State >orary jail were all but demolished by Highway Department, declared, "must he mob, and the federal building be consistent with the amount and vas extensively damaged. kind of service which it renders. Al- Rioters usd battering rams, then lotment of funds must be on the basi ossed flaming fireballs into the build- of use and need and not mere extent." ings. Gasoline was poured onto floors Major Construction Needed nd slashed on walls. "We are now at a point," Mr. Ken- The mob sped through the streets nedy asserted, "where major highway n automobiles, firing pistols and construction and reconstruction are ifles. Martial law was declared last demanded. Adding a lane here and ight to cope with the growing throng. there to an existing poorly aligned w General Contreras promised he roadway has got us by, but at con- would make a personal request to siderable cost in accident production President Cardenas for a special or- and loss in revenue and industrial ac- der of execution for the accused tivity." slayer. Mexican law does not provide C. C. Burdick, bureau manager of death for such a crime. the Highway Planning Survey, ex- plained that the wok of the Highway. Planning Survey "is more than mere- Boom In oo s ly getting the facts. In addition to getting them, it is compiling them, in-S u terpreting them, and even more im- uts Ex chaiig1 e portant than that .it is using them in the day-to-day highway problems which are perplexing the highway ad- Founders See Rosy Future ministrator and the highway engi- For New Cooperative veer." The planning survey came into be- Prompted by the unexpected de- ing, Mr. Burdick stated, because of mand on their books, the student the insistent force of the obsolescence book excsange yesterday began to of-our highways, because of the trend bok ehan straypeannto in accident production with its enor- formulate plans for a permanent co- mous attendant human and economic operative setup in conjunction with costs, and because of the present-day campus organizations, its founders choking of our arteirial highways and Already most of the 1,200 books it streets in populous centers. received have been sold, leading the Today the conference will break up store to issue a call for the more into a traffic group and an engineer- sor t eacllfkh.o ing group. The engineering sessions popular textbooks. will be held at 9:30 a.m. in the Union 'We realize that a permanent Ballroom and at 1:30 p.m. in Room group along the line we have estab- 348 West Engineering Building. The sed is definitely a. campus need," traffic sessions will be held at 9:30 Meyer Goldberg, Grad,, one of the a.m. and 1:30 p.m., both meetings to founders, said yesterday, "and we be in Rooms 319-325 of the Union, plan actively to support all organiza- Gov. Murphisex-pecteUon.be a tions that recognize this fact" (ov. Mur y i ed tonPae2 The store charges a 15 per cent fee - on the sale price, which the student Independents Begin sets for himself Petitioning Today highway Commission Petitioning for president and secre- Displays Photographs tary of each of the ten independent A State Highway Commission dis- men's zones will open today, Coir play consisting of tinted photographs statesman, and a former domestic servant, Catherine, as his wife, Mrs. Pargmnent said, was too modern for the rather decadent nobles. The Czar's efforts toshave the nobles' beards, change their tradi- tional clothes and foods and import new customs, Mrs. Pargment said, provide another illustration of the social revolution that he wrought. The actor Simonov has the massive figure of the energetic Peter, whom he portrays in all his moods, Mrs. Pargment said, as reveler at cc 't balls, as a worker in the industries he was trying to develop, as lover and as despot. Peter's son, who plotted with the dissatisfied nobles against his father, she said, is excellently played by Cherkassov as a half-witted and sniveling paralytic. The role of Catherine is taken by All Tarasova, whom Mrs. Pargment called "a per- fect Russian type." The picture is based on the novel and research of Alexei Tolstoy, who produced what many critics have called the best portarit of Peter I, Mrs. Pargment said, stating that Tolstoy is now Russia's greatest his- torical novelist and dramatist. Navy Abandons I Publicity Policy On Armaments Official Report Muni On Building Program For First Time In 13 Years, WASHINGTON, Feb. 15.-(P)-The United States Navy clamped a lid of secrecy upon its warship building progress tonight-reversing a public-' ity policy of 13 years standing. Whether the purpose was to keep certain data from foreign powers was net stated. Officials expained mere- ly that the new policy was "in the intere t of the public welfare." Periodically, in the past, the navy had made public percentage figures showing how much progress had been made with the hull and machinery of ships under construction. Delays in; construction were shown. The monthly report issued today, and dealing with three-score men of war now being built, omitted these details. Observers understood the omission was part of a general tight- ,ning up on information. The possibility has been discussed that the United States may join other powers in building battleship:; larger than the present treaty limit of 35.- 000 tons. (Japan has refused to comply with a request from the United States and Great Britain that she disclose whe- her she is building ships larger than 35,000 tons.) BIequests For Text Book Lending Library Sought St udnts who wish to make re- quests for books from the Text Book Lending Library may leave the titles of desired books in Angell Hall Study Hall, Prof. Erich A. Walter, chair- men of the library committee, has announced. The names of books needed will be printed in the Daily every week so that possible donoros may be informed. Recommendation of an academic counselor is necessary in order to borrow books from the library, Pro- fessor Walter pointed out. Varsity Tank Team Battles IYaleTonight Revival Of Old Feud Seen As A Test Of Nationi Swimming_Supremacy Coach Mann Calls Team 'Best Ever By STEWART FITCH A swimming feud of long standing will come to a head tonight when Capt. Ed Kirar leads his Michigan tankers into Payne Whitney Gymna- sium pool in New Haven, Conn. to clash with a strong Yale squad. Both teams are staking a brilliant record in the meet. Yale, with its string of 163 dual meet victories brok- en only last year by Harvard, is plac- ing its claim to national swim fame on the block alongside Michigan's long standing dominance of Mid-West and National Collegiate aquatic circles. The teams last met in 1930 when the Bulldogs whipped the Wolverines 44-20. They have not met since that time mainly because Coach Bob Kip- uth refused to bring his team west and Matt Mann put his foot down{ at travelling east again. Since the Elis would not come to Ann Arbor and since the Michigan1 swimmers became annoyed at their boasts of being the greatest dual meet team in the country, Coach Mann fi- nally agreed to go east again, al-1 though this time he had a great deal1 of difficulty in carding a meet with the Yale outfit.I Michigan has whipped Yale on three occasions in the National Col- legiate meets held each year but itst dual meet record against the Bull-I dogs does not reflect as much success.I So the meet tonight will go a longI way in settling the argument as toc dual meet supremacy.t Michigan will enter the pool rated as the favorite, but not a top-heavy one. Yale is unbeaten this year in Eastern Intercollegiate competition and boasts one of its perennially fine aggregations. The Wolverines, on the other hand have an outfit that Matt Mann believes to be the best1 he has ever coached. Headlining the evening's events will be the clash between Capt. John Ma- cionis of Yale and Tom Haynie oft the Varsity. Macionis was a member of the 1932 Olympic team and Haynie was rated the most outstanding col- legiate tanker in the country last year. Haynie is rated the edge over the Yale distance star, however, by virtue of his victory over him in the 440- yard event in the Nationals last year, Another event expected to be close- ly contested is the fancy diving in Which Danny Endeweiss of the Eli will be Fitted against Jack Wolin and Hal Benham of the Varsity. Both Wolin and Benham are untried in tough competition but according to Mann they are the equals of Ben Grady, Varsity ace last year. who de- feated Endeweiss in the Nationals. Michigan's greatest strength lies in he free style events and the relays. Conutinueci on Page 3) Alumni in Nebraska, Iowa To H{ear Tapping T. Hawley Tapping, general secre- tary of the Alumni Association left. Sunday on a ten day tour of Univer- sity of Michigan Clubs in Nebraska and Iowa. He will address the clubs on the function of the Association and advise officers of the clubs on alumni affairs. Leads Swimmers -(4 Garg Cartoonist Wins $50 Prize In Ad Contest Capt. Ed. Kirar of the Varsity swimming team will lead the Wol- verines against the Yale natators tonight at New Haven in the first clash of the two squads since 1930. De Madariaga To Speak Here Thomas Mann. To Follow In Lecture Series Salvador de Madariaga, Spanish statesman and man of letters, will open the second half of the Oratori- cal Association lecture course Feb. 24, with a talk on "World Peace." Senor De Madariaga will be fol- lowed on the lecture program by Thomas Mann, self exiled German novelist, who will appear here March 3; Wendell Chapman, distinguished photographer and student of natural life, who will show pictures here March 15, and H. V. Kaltenborn, news commentator, who will speak April 15. Mann, considered by many critics the world's greatest living writer, will lecture on "The Coming Victory of Democracy." Among his best known literary works are the novels "Bud- denbrooks" and "The Magic Moun- tain." Senor De Madariaga has made four lecture tours in the United States. and has also lectured extensively in England and Scandinavia. He has served as Spanish ambassador to the United States and France, and a- delegate to the League of Nations. His literary activities have included works on Spanish and English poetry, and on politics. His latest book, "An- archy or Hierarchy," outlines a plan for a reformed democracy. Floods Recede Throwrh State 'Cold Wave Holds Michigan Waters In Check 13 At least one Michigan student went into his exams happy-Max Hodge, '39, Gargoyle cartoonist, was notified just before his first final that he was the winner of $50 in a national ad- vertisement cartoon contest for col- lege students. Hodge's award, which came from the Ford Motor Co., was one of seven. He submitted two entries. He was told that the second may be purchased next year. The winning advertise- ment will be used as part of a nation- wide campaign in college magazines. Opera Singers Head Festival Progiram List Other Features To Include Philadelphia Orchx stra, Spalding, Rubinstein Seven Metropolitan Opera stars, four singers, a world-renowned violin- ist and a Russian pianist will par- icipate in the 45th annual May Fes- tival Series of six concerts from May 11 to 14. President Charles A. Sink of the music school announced yester- day. The Metropolitan Opera stars in- clude Chare Baromeo, aid Richard Bonelli, baritones; Hilda Burke, so- prano; Bruna Castagna, contralto; Marjorie Lawrence, Wagnerian art- ist; Giovanni Martinelli and Nino Martini, tenors. Other singers are: Marian Ander- ion, Negro contralto, Agnes Davis, American soprano, Arthur Hackett, chairman of the voice department in the School of Music and Martin Van Deursen, baritone, also of the School of Music. Albert Spaulding, violinist, and Ar- tur Rubinstein, Russian pianist, will also be present. The Philadelphia Orchestra, con- ducted by Eugene Ormandy, will play for all the concerts, while the Choral Union, directed by Prof. Earl V. Moore of the music school will sing Rach- maninoff's "Bells" and Bizet's "Car- men." Juva Higbee will conduct the Young People's Festival Chorus in the premiere of "John Bunyan," by Dor- othy James of Ypsilanti. Bruna Castagna will close the series when she joins the Choral Union and the Phiadelphia Orchestra. in singing "Carmen." Ships Near Rescue Of Stranded Soviets MOSCOW, Feb. 15.-()--Two ice- breakers, one of which was in sight of the ice floe refuge of four Rus- sian scientists, worked feverishly to- night preparing for the take-off of planes to rescue the stranded men off the coast of Greenland. The icebreaker Murman, which the scientists radioed was clearly visible pushed huge floes apart with her prow in carving a seaplane base out of theArctic waters. The Murman's captain advised he was within 12 miles of the drifting floe. The Soviet ship Taimyr, some 14 miles from the floe, fought her way, foot by foot through thick ice to a position where her land planes could be assembled and flown from an ice field. Charges Withdrawn By Theatre Ower Charges of malicious destruction of property which grew out of the Mich- igan Theatre riot of Oct. 2 were yes- terday withdrawn against Robert Gol- den. '40, and Martin Messimer, '40. Acting for Angelo Poulos, owner Ofl the theatre, Attorney Richard lr. Whitker asked Justice Jay H. Payne to rop nthe charge. Pavne a--reed1after Schuschnigg' s Conferei4ee With Der Fuehrer Ends Ini 'Friendly Relations' Police Forces Now Under Pro-Germhan VIENNA, Feb. 15.-(P)-The cab- inet of Chancellor Kurt Schuschnigg was revised tonight with the addition of two ministers sympathetic toward Nazi Germany. Arthur Seysz-Inquart, who enjoys the confidence of Adolf Hitler, was named Minister of Interior, a post in which he will control Austria's police forces. An exponent of pan-German ideas,. Professor Ardamovitch, was made Minister of Justice. A third German sympathizer, Dr. Edmund Glaise-Horstenau, was re- appointed to the revised cabinet as- minister without portfolio. Unconfirmed reports German and Italian troops were reinforced on the aorthern and southern borders of Austria had the effect of adding to the jittery atmosphere around Schuscli- nigg's headquarters, frequenty termed "Europe's uneasiest chahcel- lery." 'Cooperation' Predicted (Informed Berlin sources predicted ,he Hitler-Schuschnigg conference would be followed by a new era of il- 'tary and econdmic as well as plitical ,ooperation between the two Ger- nanic powers, (These sources predicted economic measures creating in effect a custonis anion and also coordination of tlie Austro-German armed forces): The ministerial appointments fol- :owed long conferences between Schuschnigg and his ministers and ?resident Wilhelm Miklas. (In Berlin the official German news %gency issued an official communique from Vienna saying "certain meas- ures" would be enforced immediately is an outcome of the Schuschnigg- Hitler , talk, but the nature of the measures was undisclosed.) . The cabinet and Miklas have been n almost continuous discussions for' 36 hours, apparently without reach- ing a complete agreement on the key tuestion of how Nazi the Austrian overnment shall become. Further Demands Rumored Schuschnigg in his conference with .Itler at Berchtesgaden, Bavaria, ac- iepted this view but President Miklas 'alked. As the cabinet shake-up somewhat leared the picture of what transpired tt the Hitler-Schuschnigg meeting, here were reports of further German temands including changes in the lustrian constitution and control of he official press bureau. It was re- )orted a German sympathizer would -oon be named to the latter post. A new decision to create a national 'efense council, for supreme control ver the armed forces, was officially sdmitted. Members of this body would include Schuschnigg and General Wilhelm 'ehner, defense secretary. Austrian Nazis were jubilant that Seysz-In- luart probably would be included in :he nowerful council. A meeting of Church forces at the Vienna City Hall protested the de- veloping nationalist course and tlanned future resistance. French, British Confer PARIS, Feb. 15.-(P)-French and British concern over the Austrian situation today led Foreign Minister Yvon Delbos to confer with the Brit- ish Ambassador, Sir Eric Phipps, on Germany's apparent view foothold in Vienna. Informed quarters said Count Dino Grandi, the Italian ambassador to Britain, had assured British Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden last week that Mussolini would stand firm for Austrian independence. In the light of this assurance the French and British were described as disappointed at how far Chancel- for Kurt Schuschnigg had agreed to go under Reichsfuehrer Hitler's pres- sure which apparently was applied at their Saturday meeting with Italy's approval of knowledge. .star Freshl an Fined For Movie Disturbance I-.... rlce Austria Gives Nazis Two Cabinet Posts 'At Hitler's Demand , ; i f 1 { S x 9 f I lraalov~f ~daUSA l~a /lc a~. I5eniocII1UiJ s 7trongest -m -tL ime 1I I Of War, Says By ROBERT MITCHELL Calling recent concessive foreign policies of the democratic countries merely efforts to avoid internation- al troubles, Dr. William A. Robson of the London School of Economics and Political Sd< i.ce, yesterday declared in a llnivei'sity lecture in Natural Science Auditorium that the great in- ternal strength of these nations gives them a Practical advantage over ny of the states engaged in bluff with them. The great denmocracies, Dr Robson explained, are weakest under normal conditions, when political controversy and national troubles boil on the sur- face. War conditions serve to central- ize and strengthen their power. Under the aggressive dictatorships, howeker, actual war tears away the mask put British Lecturer of democracy in that nation, the subject of his talk. Political institu- tions of democracy, including popu- lar suffrage, representation and' the party system, exist there, he de- clared by way of primary analysis, as well as the basic political rights of individual freedom. His third criterion, democratic temper of the people, he said, shows most completely the vitality of de- mocracy in England today. 'This temper is expressed in the tolerance for minorities and ability of the people to have great national unity. International parties of the extreme right and the extreme left are far, overshadowed by the strictly nation- al parties, he pointed out, giving as an example of the country's national unity, the support given to Prime Minister Stanley Baldwin in the re- steadily receding waters indicated Tuesday night the danger point had been passed in floods that have in-{ undated Michigan's lowlands since Saturday night. A cold wave that arrived Monday night continued to hold the state in its grip, checking for the time being the rush of more waters to flooded sectors. The weather prediction was -ontinued cold acconpanJed by snow. At Saginaw, declared by the United States weather bureau at East Lan- ring to be the flod's only "danger point," the Saginnw River halted. its rise a 10 a.m. Tuesday. Its tribu- taries were reported declining at a rapid rate. At Grand Rapids Peter A. Kam-' meraad, public service director, said the Grand River was under control1 aind that tle cret of tie high water would pa s d1ownriVer Thursday with no further damage to the city. F7inal.rryouts Today For Magazine Staff' Literary magazine tryouts will be interviewed for the second and last time from 5 to 6 p.m. today in Room 3218 Angell Hall, the committee ap- pointed by the Board in Control of Student Publications announced, Positions are open to scholastically eligible students, with experience not a reauisite. The four-man committee was chos- en by the Board to submit a plan of organization and a personnel for some suitable campus literary mag- azine to be distributed gratis from time to time to Daily subscribers. Several students were interviewed I yesterday. Progressives Plan Drive For Spanish Amibulance