The Weather Cloudy, showers in East, cooler in south and central portion to- day; tomorrow fair, warmer Li L, Sir' iga Daiti Editorials Thinking The Emancipation Of Swing . . VOL. XLVII. No. 123 AIlq ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, MARCH 20, 1938 PRICE FIVE U Michigan Gets First' In Relays, Gives Loud Lectures Scores In Ten Events; 401/ Garnered In Lash Misses Of Eleven Points Are 5th Win Mark / In 3,000 Meters frDIANAPOLIS, Ind., March 19.- (Special to The Daily)-Michigan's track team re-affirmed and duplicat- ed its Westetn Conference supremacy in the sixth Butler relays carniva] here tonight!, winning the University team title for the fifth straight yea with a total of 40%/2 points. Balance again proved a winning formula for Coach Charlie Hoyt's Wolverines as they placed in every event but one, the high jump, in which Michigan had no entries. Michigan had one relay winner, the two-mile team, and an individual winner as Bill Watson 'broke his own shot put record with a throw of 51 feet 2 2 inches. The Wolverine medley relay team again placed second to Indiana in record time. The four-mile team took a third and the mile team a fourth as Pittsburgh, with Long John Woodruff, won the coveted mile title held by Michigan. Harry Woodstra, of Michigan State, and Michigan's Elmer Gedeon, pro- vided the meet's biggest thrill in the 61 yaid high hurdles as the Spartan Ace won in a photo-finish in 7.4 sec- onds. That time tied the relay and "best listed mark" of Purdu5s Ken Sandbach, although off the :73.3 by Allan Tolmich of Wayne at New York two weeks ago. Two other carnival records were broken, both by Indiana teams as they reversed their Big Ten showing to finish second in the team stand- ing; The Hoosier medley relay team, pressed, by Michigan, as at Illinois two weeks ago when they established a "best listed mark of 10:15, won in 10:16.8 and the four-mile team lapped its field to win. in 17:36.8." Michigan's two mile team of Jes- ter, Hogan, Buchanan and Davidson, won on the strength of a last-lap kick by Davidson to finish in 7:46.4. Michigan had other placers, as Bill (Continued on Page 7)I Beak Selected Academy Head For Next Year 43rd Annual Meet Elects Hunt As Vice-President; Others Are Reelected The Michigan Academy of Science, Arts and Letters closed its 43rd an- uual meeting here yesterday by elect- ing Prof. Arthur E. R, Boak, chair- man of the history department, presi- dent for the 1939 meeting. Dr. H. R. Hunt; professor in the zoology de- partment at Michigan State College, was named vie-president. The other officers for the 1938 meeting were reelected: Prof. Leigh J. Young of the forestry school will again serve as secretary; Prof. E. C. Prophet of Michigan State College will remain as treasurer; Prof. R. B. Hall of the geography department was retained as editor; and Dr. W. W. Bishop, University Librarian, will again be librarian for the Academy. In the morning meeting of the geology and mineralogy section yes- terday, talks were given by Margaret L. Morse, G. M. Ehlers, E. C. Brill, David Swann, C. A. Arnold, Kenneth W. Dow, M. W. Senstius, Frank Le- verett and G. M. Stanley-all of the University; others were given by A.M. Chickering of Albion College and A. S. Warthin, Jr., Vassar. The botany section heard talks on flora and plants of Michigan and Florida. C. F. Boehler, John Rogers and H. O. Whittemore spoke before the landscape architecture section. Several men from the University, W. H. Egly. F. 0. Copley. W. E. Blake, Bennett Weaver, C. D. Thorpe, Paul Mueschke, C. C. Walcutt and M. L. Williams, spoke at the language and ! literature meeting: H. F. Wilson, Henry H. Crane To Open Series Of Talks Today Scranton Martin Topics Pastor Will Give Lou1 Lectures; War-Christianity Dr. Henry Hitt Crane. pastor of the Elm Park Episcopal Church, Scran- ton,. Pa., who was selected to deliver the 41t series of the Loud lectures here from Monday through Wednes- day, will speak at 10:40 a.m., today at the Methodist Church on "Why Christ?" / , Hir afternoon series of talks will be delivered at 4:15 p.m. Monday, Tues- day and Wednesday in the Union Ballroom on the general topic "Sanity in a War-Mad World." Dr. Crane re- turned last summer from a year's tour of Europe and Asia and is an author- ity on the foreign situation. The evening series discussing the question "Dare We Be Christians?" will be given at 7:30 p.m. Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday at the First Methodist Church.j The Loud Lectureship, which is ad- ministered by the Wesleyan Guild Corporation, was initiated in 1897 through a bequest of Henry Martin Loud, a, retired minister. Since that time prominent religious leaders have been brought to the campus to lec- ture on the general theme of "The Evidences, History, Development and Reasonableness of the Christian Re- ligion." This year's lecturer holds degrees from Connecticut Wesleyan Univer- sity, Boston University School of Theology and DePauw University. He was YMCA Service Secretary in England and France during 1917 and was pastor of Methodist churches in Gorham, Mc., and Newton and Mal- den. Mass., before going to Scranton in 1928. "The cowards will go to war," said Dr. Crane at a recent Youth Con- gress," and the really courageous ones will say I won't kill a man.' iMaerial Gain Forces Pacts, IF Slosson Claims Material interest, are of more im- mediate importance than political ideologies in determining present-day alignments of European powers in the opinion of Prof. Preston W. Slosson of the history department. Professor Slosson pointed out that there could be few parallel interests among the fascist states because of their intensely nationalistic aims. The much publicized Rome-Berlin-Tokio axis was primarily of value as a threat to the democracies rather than a mil- itary alliance directed toward a com- mon goal, he believes. European democracies are also united by a common fear of fascism's increasing aggressions, he said, rather than any sympathy with each other's political philosophies. Well satisfied with the territorial status quo, Pro- fessor Slosson explained, these powers are forced to ally themselve against foes who profess a destiny of terri- torial aggrandizement. The alliance between Russia and France. recalling the pre-war agree- ment between Czarist Russia and Re- publicas France, illustrates well that political differences have been sur- (continued on Page 2) Detroit Police Put Down : AniNaz iDemonratinn Crisler Night Preparations Are Complete Martineau, Dickson, Munn To Address Crowd; Band Is To Furnish The Music Souvenir Program To Be Put On Sale Preparations for students to greet Head Coach Fritz Crisler and his new staff of assistants were complet- ed last night as finishing touches were put on the program of the Cris- ler Night Rally to be held at 8 p.m. tomorrow in Hill Auditorium. All four of the new coaches, Cris- ler, Backfield Coach Earl Martineau, End Coach Campbell Dickson and Line Coach Clarence Munn. will be present and talk at the affair. A football autographed by members of the coaching staff and two 50-yard line tickets to the Michigan State football game next fall will be given away by Sigma Delta Chi for the program with the lucky number. The varsity band will be present, as will cheerleaders. Band To Play 'Victors' The evening will start with the band playing' "The Victors," after which several Michigan cheers underi the direction of Michigan's head cheerleader, Bob Canning, will be{ given. I Jack Thom, '38, chairman of the rally, will then introduce Michael Gorman, editor of the Flint Journal,s who will serve as master of cere- monies. Mi'. Gorman will persent Coach Martineau who is to speak.z The band will play "Varsity" fol- lowing Martineau's talk, and then Coach Munn will talk, after whichc there will be more yells and then a> talk by Coach Dickson.t To Hold Drawingc Drawings for Sigma Delta Chi's autographed football, and the tickets to the Michigan State game wll next1 be held. Coach Crisler will be introducedt at the end of the drawing, following the playing of the "Crisler Medley" by 'the band. This medley is madet up of songs .of the University of Minnesota, the University of Chicago and Princeton University, schools where Crisler coached before hea came to Michigan.1 The rally will end with more chers e and the "The Yellow and The Blue."I Re1hgion Topic At Symposium Professors To Take Part In Lane Hall Parley "Revealed Religion and Its Rela- tion to the Modern Church" will be the subject for the second Interfaith symposium to be held at 3 p.m. today at Lane Hall. Prof. Ruben L. Kahn of the medical school, Prof. Phillip L. Schenk of the English department and Prof. Charles B. Vibbert of ther philosophy department compose ther faculty panel.I Professor Kahn will represent ther Jewish tradition, Professor Schenk the Protestant, and Professor Vib-2 beret the Catholic in the round table discussion which will be open for" questions and debate from the floorv at all times, it was announced. "Religion on Common Ground ort Battle Ground"'will be the subject, of 'the third symposium to be held March 27. It will be followed by the discussion of "International Religionf in the National State" on the suc-t ceeding Sunday, the fourth .of theC series.I Mexico Takes oil Property; WalkoutEnds Workers Return To Jobs; Agree To Collaboration With The Government Foreign Interests To Stage Defense MEXICO CITY, Marchn19.-UP)- Mexico's oil workers went back to work late today "to collaborate with the government" in operating the country's expropriated $400,000,000 oil industry. Workers ended a short "folded arms strike" as 17 American and other foreign owned companies whose property was taken over today by the Government mapped a legal attack on President Lazaro Cardenas' expro- priation decree. A widening economic 'crisis faced the Government as a result of exten- sion of its "Mexico for the Mexicans" policy. Mining Next New labor difficulties brought the possibility that national expropria- tion might be extended to include the equally important mining industries of Mexico. Financial paralysis followed the dramatic turn in Mexico's long- smouldering oil industry dispute. The Central Bank of Mexico suspended all dealings in foreign exchange, and all Mexico City banks followed suit. President Cardenas indicated de- valuation of the peso was considered and called on Congress to appropriate funds to finance the government's newly acquired properties. The peso was quoted yesterday at 27.75 cents. Spokesmen for the dispossessed oil companies said they planned an ap- peal to a district court for an injunc- tion against the expropriation decree and an ultimate appeal to the Su- preme Court against constitutionality of the 1936 law on which the Pres- ident based his action. Officials Skeptical Most oil officials were faintly skep- tical of being able to obtain help from the courts, however. The Su- preme Court recently upheld an ar- bitral wage award to oil company workers which was the immediatel cause of the Mexican crisis. The award granting wage increases f and other benefits to the industry's 1 18,000 workers would have increased1 operating costs $7,200,000, the Labor Board held.1 Company officials maintained theirc inability to meet the award, saying itc would increase costs $12,000,000 ai year. They declared 1936 profits werer only $5,500,000. Foreign observers believed the Pres-9 ident's action was attributable asI much to his "Mexico for the Mex- icans" policy as to the exigencies ofx the conflict with the foreign-dom- inated oil industry. Service To Honor t SpanishLoyalistst Poems written in Spain will ber read by .Kimon Friar, Grad., at a memorial service in honor of thea Loyalist cause to be held at 6 p.m. to- night at the Unitarian Church. The organ will be played by Helen t Zbindon, '38SM, and George Finch, '38SM, will give a violin solo. A "fast supper," the proceeds of which will go toward the $250 being raised by the Progressive Club to furnish the engine of an ambulance for Spain, will follow the service. Mrs. Mentor L. Williams and Mrs. George Helm will supervise the sup- per. Soup and crackers are being donated by members of the church. Cutlery and dishes will be lent by the Wolverine. Dead Number Over 600; Rebels Claim Air Raids To Have Been Justified BARCELONA, March 19.-(AP)-A lull in the deadly roar of Insurgent bombers gave blood-drenched Bar- celona a merciful, although appre- hensive, respite today. For the first since since Wednesday the skies were clear of raiders. But no one knew when they would resume the appalling death and de- struction wrought during two terrify- ing days of relentless bombardment. Stock-taking was a pitiful mission in this somber capital of Government Spain. There were 640 shattered bodies, inost of them mangled beyond iden- tification, laid out in grotesque rows Fuller Advises Practical Use For Sociology Barcelona A Blood-Drenched Shambles After Rebel Bombing Declares Students Would Rather Handle Modern Problems Than Theory The sociology teacher of today need no longer hold himself out as an ex- pert on social problems but needs to be an expert on the "sociology of so- cial problems," according to Prof. Richard C. Fuller of the sociology de- partment. The sociology teacher must learn to fit a general theory of social and personal disorganization to concrete problems, Professor Fuller said. "But the student may well ask." he observed, "what all this has to do with breadlines in Detroit, with dis- crimination against Negro students in university communities, with ve- nereal disease and illegitimate babies, with the threat of fascism and war. These are the phenomena of social problems." The student's interest in social problems, Professor Fuller believes, is an interest in what can be done about them. "He wants to know what solutions are feasible in the light of what we know about present day so- ciety, and yet we rarely tell him. "We seldom make it clear to him that we have such social problems as inadequate housing, poverty, war and race prejudice simply because some of our people think that a certain situ- ation is bad but they find that they1 cannot remove or correct it withou upseting certain sacred values held} by others and often by themselves."j u , Seek To Avoid NLIRBHeariny IT.U., Ann Arbor Press Meet With Lawyer Representatives of the Ann Arbor Press, the International Typographi- cal Union and a National Labor Re- lations attorney conferred here yes- terday, but no results of the meeting were announced. The conference may be resumed Monday. Harold Cranefield, NLRB lawyer, was here in an effort to make the Ann Arbor Press comply with the Wagner Act, under which charges were filed against the printing plant, and thus eliminate the necessity of a hearing, according to Harry A. Reifin, ITU representative, George Meader, counsel for the Ann Arbor Press, Reifin, Cranefield and George Burke, attorney, attend- ed the conference. The labor board in Washington has authorized its Detroit office to issue a complaint and hold a hearing March 31. No NLRB complaint has been issued yet, according to Crane- Ai plrlTTlpncc n.e.nnln in$.i s crCanA ha in over-taxed morgues. Only 105 had been identified. One doctor declared that he be- lieved over 200 more bodies would be discovered in wrecked buildings. Highest estimates placed the dead at 1,300 and injured at more than 2,-. 000 in the 13 Insurgent attacks. More than 700 wounded, including 75 small boys and girls, were crowd- ed into Clinic Hospital alone. Others were treated in emergency hospitals and sent home. Some residential sections were de- serted by terror-stricken families who took to the countryside. Many women were among the dead, their heads crushed by fallen ma- sonry and beams. Near their bodies were those of 12 babies, streaks of dried blood on "their dirt-covered faces. Hundreds of horror-stricken amen and women clustered about hospital doors. Women cried in corrilors as they searched in vain for missing members of their families. .One hospital had to place mat- tresses on the floor to care for the wounded. Some were covered with sheets as the injured died after ar- riving. United Socialist Youth organiza- tions meanwhile called for two divi- sions of men totalling 22,000 men. Insurgent authorities declared thet bombings were justified by the dis- covery of military objectives, includ- ing several buildings listed as storage places. With the absence of the raiders, shops reopened during the day. Sub- ways and trolleys resumed normal operations. - President Can, Oust Morgan, Experts Claim1 New Deal Lawyers Say He Must Prove Charges Against Board To Stay WASHINGTON, March 19.--(/)'- Administration legal experts con- tended today that President Roose- velt could remove Arthur E. Morgan' from the chairmanship of the Ten- nessee Valley Authority if Morgan refused to answer questions at a White House hearing Monday. Mr. Roosevelt has given the TVA enairman until Monday afternoon to answer "yes" or "no" to Presiden- tial demands that he give facts to support his charges of misconduct against his fellow directors. Many members of Congress con- tend that, if Morgan persists in his refusal to answer Presidential ques- tions and his demands that Congress1 instead of the President investigate the TVA, the most Mr. Roosevelt cani do is to ask him to resign.1 They say the TVA Act gives Con- gress removal power over directors of the public power and planning agency and authorizes the President to remove directors only in event they are opposed to the policies of the Act or appoint employes without regard to merit. However the Administration legal experts contended that the Supreme Court had upheld the President's power to remove officials of the ex- ecutive branch of the government in an opinion delivered by the late Chief Justice Taft in 1926. Oh Mama, That Stork Derby's Here Again!. TORONTO, March 19.-(Canadian Press)-Four Toronto mothers today won equal shares in the $500,000 "Stork Derby" estate left by the ;late] Charles Vance Millar.7 The winners, tied with nine eligible' babies each born in the 10 years fol- Lithuania Bows To Polan As Hitler Demands Brea In Czech-Russian Allianc ._ 4 Wide Anti-Jewish Rioting Reported By Warsaw; Two Dead,_Many Hurt Czechs .Are Deaf To Nazi Reues LONDON, March 19.-(P)--Little Lithuania capitulated today to the overwhelming force of neighboring Poland and kept peace In the Balti. But she did not surrender her in- dependence as did Austria a week. ago in the face of Reichsfuehrer Adolf Hitler's ultimatum backed by the force of the German Army. Poland's resort to strong-arm tac- tics, closely\ emulating Hitler's an- gered such countries as Great dBr ain, France and Soviet Russia, as- sociated with her in the League o Nations. But they counselled Lithu- anian submission to keep a relatively minor border incident from becoming another Sarajevo and embroiling all Europe. The Polish demands, while on the surface apparently r e a s o n a jble. aroused deep resentment in Lond , and Paris because they were backied by a threat to tramle on Lthuar'iis war-born independence. They were especially humiliatig to Lithuanians since they called for restoration of diplomatic rlations and business connections-non-ex- istent for 18 years-on, a basin- mount to abandonment of Lithuana's claim to her ancient capital; Wilno' Polish forces seized Wilno, traWi. tional shrine of Lithuanian history, Oct. 9, 1920. Renewed attacks were brought on the government of Prime Minister Ne- ville Chamberlain. Powerful group, including some of the Prinie Minis- ter's own Conservative Party me'- bers, demanded he declare'fiatly Brit- ain would support France if she should go;to the aid of Czechoslovakia to repel an invasion by Hitler. Asks Czech-Soviet Break PRAHA, March 19.-W) -Adolf Hitler was said by diplomatic sources today to have demanded that Czecho- slovakia abandon her military alli- ance with Soviet Russia - but the Czech Government showed no indi- cation that it would comply. Hitler's demand was said to have constituted Der Fuehrer's basic con.' (Cortnued on Page 3) Report Terms Student Dorms VitalNecessity Second Alumni Program Lists University Needs For Next Ten Years Student. dormitories were named yesterday as the most vital need of the University in a report on 163 projects suggested for the second Alumni Ten Year Program prepared under President Ruthven's direction. Endowments totaling $1,040,000 were said to be necessary for their con- struction. Needs of various departments are surveyed by the University under the Ten Year system and the reports in- form alumni what the departments believe to be their most pressing needs. It is hoped that various alumni groups will establish funds maturity withm the ten year period to fill those needs. Thirty-seven of the 40 projects out- lined in the 1927 report were taken up. Other projects listed are: $1,000,- 000 for a student religious center, $80,000 for a laboratory theater, and appropriations for buildings for the School of Business Administration, School of Music and the School of Forestry and Conservation. Twenty-five undergraduate scho- larships ranging from $100 to $500 a year, established to aid needy stu- dents and to encourage study in un- developed fields are included in the list. Thirty-six fellowships for al- most every department in the Uni- versity, and 16 research grants for as much as $100,000 are asked under thA nmripe.f. Mic(eiuigai First State University, Often First In Educational Fields (EDITOR'S NOTE'I: This is the first in a series of weekly articles on the his- tory of th..e University and of its various schools and colleges.) By MORTON L. LINDEIt The history of the University of Michigan is one of a pioneer, a leader. Since those early frontier days, when the idea of a state educational sys- tem was first conceived in Detroit, Michigan has built up an impressive list of "firsts." Although the official seal of the University of Michigan originally carried the date, 1837, its actual his- tory begins with an act of the state osophy, military science, philosophy, chemistry, medicine and economics, After much research had been done by men appointed by the legislature to investigate possibilities in the edu- cational field, The Organic Act of the University of Michigan was drawn up in 1837. This act laid the foun- dation for all future developments. The foundation of the present University was planned to consist of a literary college, a medical school and a law school. Actually, however, ony the first was immediately estab- lished; the others followed in 1850 and 1859 resentivel. A noard f t l 1 l I "c r f