The Weather Increasing cloudiness today; occasional rain tomorrow, A6F Albl .ftitr4t g an Pati j Editorials A New Program For An Old Party? .. Wanted: A Site F.; The Obseratry. VOL. XLVIII. No. 113 ANAo ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 9, 1938 PRICE FIVE CENTS British, Italian Envoys Start Conversations; Yoda Guilty Tomorrow, England And (ermanv To Commence Discussions On Colonies Hoover And Hitler Convene At Reich Leading news dispatches last night from Europe reported friendship talks between British and Italian diplo- mats and plans for similar conver- sations between German and British envoys; a talk between the only liv- ing former president of the United States and Adolph Hitler; and the confession of a former head of the Russian secret police that he was guilty of four medical murders, in- cluding that of Maxim Gorky, fa-. m'ous writer. Tn Shanghai, the Chinese reported that Guerilla bands had captured a dozen towns in Honan and Hopeh provinces behind advancing Japanese columns. Meanwhile, the Japanese bombarded cities on the south bank of the Yellow River.l In Hendaye, Spanish insurgents reinforced a blockading fleet after sinking the Cruiser Baleares. t Anglo-Italian Discussions Begin While major nations engaged in the most furious armaments race since the World War, British and Ital- ian diplomats started bargaining in Rome. On Thursday the British will begin even more ticklish discussions in London with Nazi Germany. It was believed the success of the London talks hinged on whether Great Brit- ain is willing to do something about Chancellor Adolf Hitler's demands for colonies. Meanwhile, in Moscow, Genrikh G. Yagoda, secret police chief who "wanted to become a Russian Hit- ler," faced the Moscow treason trialt court and pleaded full guilt in four medical murders. He admitted having ordered the death of his predecessor in office, and having tried unsuccessfully to poison Nikolai Yezhoff, present sec- ret police chief. He also testified that he had sent $100,000 to Leon Trotsky, exiled former Soviet leader. Former President Herbert Hoover last night had no comment to make after his meeting with Hitler at the Reich chancellery. Rebels Reinforce Blockade Chancellery officials said that the two statesmen had talked of national problems, German-American rela- tions and "just about everything." The conversation was in the presence of Hugh R Wilson, the United States ambassador, and an interpreter., At Hendaye, France the loss of the 10,000-ton cruiser Baleares caused the Spanish insurgent government today to reinforce its blockading fleet with armed trawlers and other con-' verted auxiliary vessels.1 Sinking of the crack cruiser Ba- leares after it was hit by a torpedo in a naval engagement early Sunday off Catagena seriously weakened the insurgent blockading fleet and in- creased the comparative strength of the government fleet. In Shanghai Chinese reported that Guerilla bands had recaptured a dozen towns in conquered territory north of the Yellow River while Japanese artillery bombarded stra- tegic cities on the south bank. Most of the reported Chinese su- cesses were along the Honan-Hopeh border, 40 to 60 miles behind the Japanese advance lines which werec held up by the broad river. Bunting Talks On Dental Fieldt Preventive Dentistry Now Offers New Chances I Discovery that ninety per cent ofI disease enters the body through the mouth has revolutionized the profes- sion of dentistry since 1900, opening a vast new field for the practice of preventive dentistry, Dean Russel W. Bunting of the School of Dentistry told pre-dental students yesterday in the second of the vocational lecture series. Due to the growth of public health! rncnna c Thtlllflefan ,', U, i.,t nd t ,ai University Hospital Separates Men-Women,' Women-Men' Bradbury Tells Of Weird Cases On Record Here Of Undetermined Sex By ROBERT I. FITZHENRY Inter-sex is what the medical au- thorities call it, but to the layman it appears more like a slice of H. G. Wells fantasy, far too fantastic for 20th century Ann Arbor. Dr. James T. Bradbury of Univer- sity Hospital unfolds a strange story from his observations of patients with undetermined sex. But the evidence is irrefutable. The highly publicized Zdenka Doubka, d a p p e r Czechoslovakian gentleman who once established a woman's Olympic track record, and Mark Weston, English girl athlete who later married a former female companion, have nothing, it would seem, on the cases which University Hospital has recorded. Strangest of all is the individual who folowed the male habits of life for 36 years. He grew up as any normal boy, played baseball, scaled fences and taunted the "sissies" who sought the company of the fairer sex. Leaving school, he found a job and later married happily. But at the age of 35, abdominal pains began to trouble him and he was admitted to University Hospital for observation. Medical authorities examined, X- Rayed, consulted case histories, scratched their heads and finally pro- claimed the patient a woman! But they were still uncertain. The patient was sent to Johns Hopkins University at Baltimore where after a cursory preliminary ex- amination the doctors enthusiastical- ly announced a possible true herma- phrodite. Medical authorities hailed the "find" as a needed addition to medical books far too uninformative on the subject. But the preliminary was also to be the conclusion as the individual foreswore a guinea-pig4 role and bolted Johns Hopkins in the night without so much as a "good- bye." Another patient, not long ago, came to the hospital for a major operation. Baptized a female and now inher thirties, she had worn dresses all her life. But preliminary diagnoses re- Big Industries Hit Small Units, Heekscher Says Economist Explains New Movements That Tend For Decentralization 1 Forces which have developed mod-I ern large-scale industrialization are preventing the growth of economic institutions which tend to decentral- ize again into a small-unit economic set-up, Prof. Eli F. Heckscher, noted Swedish economist, said yesterday in a University lecture in Natural Sci- ence Auditorium. Professor Heckscher will deliver two more lectures at 4:15 p.m. today and tomorrow on "Mercantilism" in' Room C, Haven Hall. The automobile and electricity, both of which are equally available and serviceable to small producers as to large industry, Professor Heckscher declared, are indicative of the new forces which tend toward decentrali- zation of large, monopolistic produc- tion. Political and psychological impediments are mainly what have hampered the progress of this decen- tralization so far, he said. Professor Heckscher traced the; growth of the centralization of in- dustry after the war and attributed it to changes in political and ec- onomic theories. Popular ideas of individualism and "laissez-faire," he said, gave way to ideas of group ac- tion, while states were much more able to control and to try and direct conditions than before. He showed the important influences of the rail- road in leading toularge industry. Statistics show that the new trend to small industry is only beginning to be effective, he stated, pointing out that in Sweden alone, of major indus- trial countries, is there an actual in- crease in small production units. Extension Division Plans Adult Series The University Extension Division, in collaboration with the Michigan State Federation of Women's Clubs, n.nfi an Qadult educagtionseries to be vealed strange .obstructions and puzzling absences. Surgeons feared to cut open such an uncommon ana- Takes Over Cap pon's Job BENNIE OOSTERBAAN tomy. Finally the problem was solved. The patient was an under- developed male. Somewhat similar is the case of a (Continued on Page 6) Student Senate Sets U pFour I PollingPlaces 2,000 Students Expected, To Participate In New P.R. Election System The Student Senate Sponsoring Committee yesterday appointed cleri- cal officers to supervise the campus- The last meeting of all those who wish to serve on the Student Senate's Election Board as coun- ters or clerks for the Friday elec- tion will be held at 4 p.m. today in the Union. wide P.R. election and listed four polling places at which more than 2,- 000 students are expected to vote Fri- day. Polling places will be open from 7:30 a.m. to 7:30,.p.m. in the Angell Hall Lobby, the Library, the Union I and the League. Candidates who wish to have theirk platforms printed in The Daily are re- quested to have them at the officesa by 12:30 p.m. today and are urgedj to typewrite them triple-spaced. Thel Daily reserves the right to abridge any } that are too long. Sample ballots will be available at 5 p.m. today in Lane Hall for the use of candidates. Patterson Will Speak On Vincent Voiture' Prof. Warner F. Patterson of the romance languages department will give a lecture on "Vincent Voiture, Poete Precieux" at 4:15 p.m. today in Room 103 Romance Languages Building. This is the sixth in a series of lec- tures sponsored by the Cercle Fran- cais, tickets for which may be se- cured at the door.r Board Names Oosterbaan As Cage Coach Former Assistant Under Cappon Takes Over Job; Weber Will Also Remain Townsend May Get Bennie's Old Post Bennie Oosterbaakn will succeed Franklin C. Cappon as head basket- ball coach it was announced yesterday by the Board in Control of Athletics. Oosterbaan was formerly assistant basketball coach under Cappon who resigned to take a football and bas- ketball coaching position on the Princeton athletic staff. Besides acting as cage mentor, Oos- terbaan will continue serving as fresh- man baseball coach and as an as- sistant coach on the football staff under Coach Herbert O. (Fritz) Cris- ler. Along with the coaching announce- ment came the election of Leo C. Beebe, of Dearborn, as captain of the basketball team for next year. Beebe, a junior, has won a Varsity award as a guard for the past two seasons. In 12 Big Ten games this year he scored 58 points. Townsend May Get Post Walter J. (Wally) Weber whose status under the new set-up was in doubt will a1sd remain as a full time member of the football coaching staff. Weber was backfield coach last sea- son. Considerable campus sentiment centered around this year's captain, John Townsend, as the likeliest can- didate for the basketball coaching assistancy. Asked last night about his feelings on the matter, Townsend, who is graduating in June, said: "I'd like to become Bennie' assist- ant since I'm planning on entering law school next fall and the part- time coaching job would fit in well with my plans." Bennie Was Good Oosterbaan becomes basketball coach after 14 years of participation in Michigan athletics both as a playern and as a coach. While a student he became one of Michigan's greatest athletes, Picked three years running as an All-American end, he won three letters each in football, basketball and baseball. Six of these teams, two in each sport won the Western Con- ference championships. During the 1928 hardwood season he led the league in high-scoring with 129. He (Continued on Page 3) Crisler Promises j 'A Fighting Team, BOSTON, March 8.-(P)-The coaches themselves were cited as col- lege football's most dangerous ene- mies today by Herbert O. (Fritz) Crisler, new Michigan head coach, during a luncheon tendered him by the Michigan Club of Boston. "I'm not worried by the reformers or other outsiders," Crisler said. "What I fear most is the constant rules changes advocated by the coaches. If they are not halted, we won't be able to recognize the game 25 years hence." Although Crisler said he was not familiar with football conditions at Michigan, he promised the Boston Alumni group a "fighting team." 'StageDoor'Run To Open Today At Mendelssohn "Stage Door, presented by Play Production, will open at 8:30 p.m. today in the Lydia Mendelssohn The- ater. The plot of the play, written by George Kaufman and Edna Ferber, is woven around the life and experi- ences of a group of "stage struck" girls who are living in one of the well-known brownstone boarding houses of New York. The cast will include more than 25 women. Roles of major importance will be layed by Ellen Rohblatt, '39; Miriam Brous, '39; Marie Sawyer, '38; Hattie Bell Ross, Grad.; Evelyn Smith, '39; Nancy Shaefer, '39; Mar- jory Coe, '38; Bunty Bain,. '39; Ruth Menefee, '39; and Bettie Howard, '39. Others in the cast include Mary Rall, '39; Beatrice Danziger, '40M; Marian Wall, Grad.; Jane Krause, '41; Rhoda Foxman, '39; Helen Hirshey, '38; Margery Soenksen, '39; Maxine Adler, '40; Roberta Jones '38; Mar- (Continued on Page 2)- Collegoe Ruling Now Requires Average Of VC ,juniors-Elect Need Sixty Honor Points In Order To Remain In School Sophomores and freshmen of the College of Literature, Science and the Arts were reminded yesterday by of- ficials of that college that beginning with this June all students who do not have at least a "C" average for the first two years of their college work will be required to withdraw permanently from the University. This requirement, known as the 60- hour -60--honor-point rule, is not new, but has been in effect since the 1932 school year. By terms of the original legislation, however, in order to givestudents a period of adjust- ment, advisers up to the present have granted extra time for attaining the average. Through 1935 an extra semester and a summer session were allowed, and since that time one extra semester has been allowed. Such ex- tensions are hereafter to be discon- tinued. Drawn up as a corollary to pro- grams in concentration at the May meeting of the faculty of the College in 1931, the rule has as its intention to make certain that students con- tinuing into the junior and senior year will be able to pursue their con- centration programs to advantage, it was explained. Transfer students from other uni- versities and colleges are subject to the requirement at the time of com- pleting 60 hours of work unless they have been in residence only one se- mester. These students who have only one semester of residence and who have earned 60 hours with less than 60 points, will be referred to a special counselor who has authority to grant an extension of time or to require withdrawal from college. Pro gressives To Hear Strikers Meeting Today Will Take Up Plans For Fiesta Lewis Falstreux, head of the strike committee of the International Typo- graphical Union now striking against the Ann Arbor' Press, and Kirby Jen- nings, also a member of the union, will speak at a meeting of the Pro- gressive Club at 8 p.m. today at the Union. A. W. Wiltse, one of the owners of the Ann Arbor Press, was invited by the club tosend a representativeto speak at the meeting, but refused the offer. Election of officers for the new semester will be held. Those offices to be filled are chairman, vice-chair- man and secretary-treasurer. The system of proportional repre- sentation to be used in the election for the Student Senate will be ex-' plained by Stanley Leibergott, '38.1 The Spanish Fiesta which the ClubN will sponsor, and plans for raising money for an ambulance to be sent to Spain will be discussed. Mooney Is To Appear In California House SACRAMENTO, Calif., March 8.- (P)-The California Assembly in an Iimnr,'rt d tv, r nP ~ra + rnrprA o, Roosevelt Demands Showdown OnTVA Internal On One Side Of the Fence David Lilienthal, Tennessee Val- ley Authority director, is shown in Washington as he outlined in a Press conference an offer to buy out private power companies in south- eastern states. Au1to Physics Meet Planned For March 1445 Lecturers, Inspection Trips And An Informal Dinner Are On Program. Here The department of physics, in con- junction with the American Institute of Physics, will sponsor the first sym- posium on the relation of physics to the automotive industry here March 14 and 15. The program includes lectures by outstanding men in the automotive industry, inspection tours of labora- tory equipment and an informal din- ner Monday night. Hutchins Hall, the Physics Building and the Union will be the main scenes of activity. Prof. Floyd A. Firestone of the physics department will deliver one of the feature talks Tuesday in Hutchins Hall. Prof. Harrison M. Randall, head of the physics department, in com- menting on the symposium, said that it was endorsed by the automobile industries in Detroit and attracted nation-wide attention. "One reason why the meeting is being held here," he said, "is in recognition of the fact that the department of physics has for a long time been actively en- gaged in the application of physics to industries." F. K. Richtmyer, Dean of the Cor- nell Graduate School, will open the program Monday morning, speaking on: "What Physics Can Do For The Automotive Industry.' Other featured speakers for the day include: Carl Breer, director of Chrysler Engineering Research; M. Muskat and F. Morgan, Gulf Re-' search Laboratories; Frederick Seitz atnd C. G. Found, General Electric Company Research Laboratory; E. J. Martin, General Motors Research (Continued on Page 2) ICC Allows Rise In Rail Prices Board Trys To Save Roads From Insolvencies WASHINGTON, March 8.-(P)- The Interstate Commerce Commis- sion granted a $270,000,000 annual increase in freight rates tonight to save the railroads from threatened insolvencies and possibly to stimulate industries which sell railroad equip- ment. Railroad men, who had pleaded for a fiat 15 per cent increase amount- ing to about $470,000,000, were frank- ihv ii sa nrnintM w ev~rnxcu, t Toubles President Will Call Three Directors For Conference In His Office Friday Resolution Asks Directors To Quit (By The Associated Press) President Roosevelt, obviously pro- voked, yesterday demanded a show- down on the internal trouble of the Tennessee Valley Authority, demand- ing that the embittered directors, Ar- thur E. Morgan, Harcourt Morgan and David Lilienthal, justify their bitter charges and counter charges if they can. Stepping directly into the row among the three men, two of whom have lined up against Chairman Ar- thur Morgan, the President an- nounced that he had called all three into a conference to be held in his office Friday. Grimly and emphatically, he told reporters that he would demand proof of the charges of bad faith that have been flying back and forth between the two factions and added that he wanted facts, not opinions; nothing but facts. Three additional developments in connection with the TVA row oc- curred during the day. Senator Norris (Dem., Neb.), au- thor of the TVA act and closely in touch with the controversy at all times, told the Senate that "intense jealousy" had led, Chairman Morgan to make angry charges against Lilien- thal and Harcourt Morgan. Norris said the "green-eyed monster" had impelled Morgan to go "beyond rea- son and right." Wendell Willkie, president of Com- monwealth and Southern Corp., wrote- Lilienthal that he would accept the latter's proposed bases for negotia- tions for the sale of competing pri- vate utilities to the TVA; if during the negotiations PWA grants to mu- nicipalities for the construction of power plants would be discontinued. A resolution was introduced in the House demanding that all three TVA directors resign. Mr. Roosevelt reviewed the back- ground of the TVA feud to the cor- respondents, adding to previous public knowledge of what had been happen- ing within the board room of that agency. After about a year in which Chairman Morgan and the Lilienthal- Harcourt Morgan faction had been seriously and almost continually at odds on matters of policy, Chairman Morgan wrote a magazine article. It appeared last September in the Atlantic Monthly, and prompted Lil- ienthal and Harcourt Morgan, as a majority of the board, to adopt a resolution asking that statements in the article which they regarded as impugning their good faith be jus- tified or withdrawn. Old Wall Street FirmCollapses Whitney Company Fails; Investigation Started NEW YORK, March 8.-(A)-The brokerage house of Richard Whitney & Company-whose senior partner ruled over the New York stock ex- change in the crucial days following the 1929 market collapse-failed to- day. Federal and state. agencies imme- diately plunged into widespread in- vestigations of the firm's activities. Although the failure was regarded in Wall Street as one of the most spectacular in exchange historynbe- cause of Whitney's prominence, it left the stock market calm. Prices of leading issues generally opened lower, slipped moderately after the news of the Whitney failure was announced from the rostrum of the exchange a few minutes after the opening and strengthened in late trading. While investigators of the Secur- ities and Exchange Commission worked behind the locked doors of the brokerage house, Assistant Attorney General Ambrose V. McCall of New York state opened private hearings, first questioning Henry D. Mygatt, a partner in the firm. Chrysler Executive Views Joh Chances Bright Despite Slump By JACK DAVIS ties for the college graduate bulked i. th, nferneonOccu-i larger at the present time in mod- opening ue ULiLco UUL ttu pational Information at the Union, dapper grey-haired Dr. James S. Thomas, president of the Chrysler Institute of Engineering, told an au-1 The conference continues its series of lectures and forums with three addresses in the Union today. At 4:15 p.m. W. A. P. John, president of the Mac- Mapus, John and Adams adver- tising agency will speak on "Ad- vertising." Two talks are sched- uled for 7:30 when J. C. Newman, special agent in the Department of Justice will discuss "Oppor- tunities in the Federal Bureau of Investigation" and E 1 e a n o r Cranefield, of the University Graduate center in Detroit will speak on "Social Service." Speaks Here Today t"h ti ,S"t -ti } 1 Z'.. '?: i<' i:i; w:: . ..,:., :":::::: :::.:w : :..':: .:: is is }:":: i: Y :":{ H. F. Taggart Appointed