V The Weather Fair and somewhat warmer today, cloudy probably show- ers tomorrow. Ll r e A& A& 4JR qvt r I J,6 jDatt Editorials Inter-Faith Symposium... Mexico Goes Ahead ... PRICE FIVE CENTS VOL. XLVIII. No. 129. ANi4 ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, MARCH 27, 1938 PRICE FIVE CENTS U U Peoples' Front, Threatened By Labor Strikes, Financial Ills Anti - Dictatorship Protest Staged By French Labor Against 'Public Safety' Rearmament Plan, Of Blum Opposed Addresses Catholics PARIS, March 26.-( iP-A rising ! tide of strikes and France's chronic financial problem raised towering ob- A stacles tonight in the path of the I ARCHBISHOP MOONEY People's Front Government. Labor, fearful that the conflict be-Na tween Premier Leon Blum's cabinet rn n 1l and the Conservative Senate majority HTWV might mean an attempt to replace 'F0 TT r~ -i the Governmnent with a "publice sae i ii4 ty" dictatorship, staged a vast protest demonstration. ByArchbishop Communists tonight proposed or- ganization of nationwide general strikes as the best means of backing Mooney Lecture Follows the Popular Front Government's fight 8 A.M. Mass At St. Mary's for life.AM. MassA S Ch y The Paris Communist Party unit Catholic Student Chapel declared in a letter to Paris .metal workers that the Senate's "reaction- Archbishop Edward Mooney, rank- ary" opposition toPremier Leon Blum ing American Catholic prelate, re- must be met by a "powerful demon- cently appointed to the new archdi- stration by the masses." oces( of Detroit, will address the Paris Communists agreed to join Newman Club following 8 a.m. mass socialists and the General Confed- in St. Mary's Catholic Students' eration of Workers in strikes "not Chapel. only in Paris but throughout France.' He will be honored at a breakfast Meanwhile, the Premier searched to be held following the mass, at for a way around the hurdle of Sen- which Rev. Clair Berry, student chap- ate opposition to rearmament expen- lain, will officiate. Alumni of the ditures under his guidance and the Newman Club and the general Cath- ranks of disgruntled' strikers grew to olic student body have been invited1 almost 30,000. to attend the breakfast.S Informed sources said they would Archbishop Mooney was born in not be surprised if a crisis, averted Mt. Sahage, Md., May 9, 1882. He when Blum bowed to the Senate's will began his preparatory studies for the Thursday, were-to come next week. priesthood at St. Charles Seminary,' Blum would not divulge details of Ellicott City, Md., and also studied the bill he was drafting but declared at St. Mary's Seminary in Baltimore. it provided amply for the nation to He received the degrees of PhD .and launch her big rearmament program STD- from the North American Col- without endangering her financial lege in Rome. Ordained in 1909, he structure. He indicated that the plan returned to this country and was might not be ready for submission to appointed pastor of St. Patrick's Parliament before the end of the Church in Youngstown, Ohio. week. . In 1925 Archbishop Mooney re- Anxiety was apparent on all sides turned to'Rome as Spiritual Director to get the rearmament program un- of the North American College. This der way in view of the dangerous sit-;position approaches that of vice-ree- ran developing on France's fron- tor, the post which the Rev. Allen J.' tiers. Babcock, former chaplain of the The Senate's determination to top- Students Chapel, now holds. The pie the fourth People's Front Govern- distinguishing feature between these ment, however, was accepted as a two positions is that Archbishop fact. Conservative spokesmen for Mooney was given c'.jarge of the, the Senate charged Blum was ob- I spiritual needs of the community,J structing the program by insisting on while matters of discipline fall with- holding the reins without the neces- in the jurirdicticn of the vice-rector. sary strength of wide support. tor. The Senate and a minority of the Archbishop Mooney was sent tc Chamber of Denuties have clamored India L 1926to serve as apostolic for a "National Union" government- delega.;e from the Papal See. He was of all parties:-which labor has on- the firstAAmerican to hold this po- posed as a plot to set up a "public sition. At the same time he was setd tat hi consecrated titular archbishop. His saf utd30,000tworkers packed Buf- duties as apostolic delegate were falo Stadium today to protest aoainst essentially thoe of papal minister Senate opposition to Blum, against the Catholic hierarchy of India. the French policy of "hands off - Spain" and against "provocation and resistance of employers to collective Ins O'rentsIouit contracts." Striking "metallus"-metal work-t .,meeIng L valist Tr oop a-+o,,aoa to e a~cc meeinps ! Hitler Scores Frontiers Set At Versailles Fuehrer In Reich Tourj Assails Two Treaties AndI The League Of Nations Explains Austrian Union To Crowds LEIPZIG, Germany, March 26.-, ( ")--Reichsfuehrer Adolf Hitler again took up the cudgels against the tat- tered Treaty of Versailles today, sar- castically scorning German frontiers set up by the pact. "Who imagined the great German Reich would stop at the ridiculous frontiers drawn at Versailles?" he shouted. A crowd of 28,000 Saxons cheered the Fuehrer in the second appearance of his electioneering swing around the Reich to convince the masses that his union of Austria and Germany was the "fulfillment of a thousand year old dream." "Does anyone believe the League of Nations was founded to help small and big nations?" he thundered. "Does anyone believe there is any such thing as international con- science?" To the "heils" of the wildly cheer- ing crowd, Hitler explained the rea- sons for Austro-German union along lines expounded yesterday in his first speech of the campaign at Koenigs- berg. He scorned both the Versailles and Saint Germain treaties, which he said forbade the plebiscite on self-deter- mination in Austria because the pow- ers of Europe did not regard it ex- pedient that Germans should unite. On the other hand, he said, they insisted on the Saar plebiscite be- cause 150,000 Frenchmen lived there. (The rich Saar region, taken from Germany after the World War and set up under League of Nations con- trol, was returned to Germany in the1 1936 plebiscite.) Visitin Pnastors Fil AnnArbor Preparations For Michigras Start Tuesday The Michigras will not take place formally until May 6 and 7 at Yost Field House, but it will begin to as- sume form at 5 p.m. Tuesday at the Union when fraternity and sorority representatives will haveĀ°a chance to let their imaginations run rife at a meeting called by booth chairman Richard Fox, '39, to make plans for the house booths. A huge carnival with rides and side- shows, the Michigras is being put on this year to raise funds for the Wom- en's Athletic Association's proposed pool and the University Band which hopes for a trip to Yale next year. The Michigras committee is spon- soring a contest among the houses this year to determine the best side, shows. Nine of last year's best money winners will be retained. They are: Chi Phi's "Rat Race," Alpha Kappa Lambda's "Golf Putting Champion- ship," Psi Upsilon's "Baseball Skill," Phi Delta Theta's "Weight Guessing Contest," which made money despite the fact that everyone won a cane,' Delta Tau Delta's "Dodger," Sigma Alpha Mu's "Dart Poker," Lambda Chi Alpha's "Soda Pop Saloon," Phi Sigma Delta's "Dart Gun" and Beta Theta Pi's "Beef Trust."' This year the honor societies will; not have booths, according to Fox, but will sponsor the rides. Last year the best ride was received by Sphinx, junior men's honorary society, which lost $37 at a "gambling" booth. Fox listed the following fraternities, which he asks to send one representa- tive to the meeting Tuesday to chair-j man their booth: Alpha Delta Phi... (Continued on Page 7) Congress Asked To Inaugurate i. i f I W olverines SITilSecond, Lb 1, 46-45; Ohio Third irvard Michigan Takes 440-Yard Martha Graham States Dance Relay To Triumph In Diepends Upon Real Life Contact Final Event OfNCAA Victory Is Ninth Troupe To Present Recital Miss Georgi the conception of "fron- I Tomorrow Evening In tier" was the European "barrier," as For Mann NatatorZ P she termed it. d___h P~itnn.,1 Q A l~ita iirl Miss Graham will dance the next Win National number, "Satyric Festival Song," (Continued from Page 1) IRY XAI VII i'I VI4i'LJ7.______________ B3Y IVAHY ALICE 'MaCKENZIE The whole purpose of the dance as an art form depends upon its;Tickets On Sale maintaining close contact with life, Martha Graham, famed exponent of Fo K~oo's Talk the modern dance, said in a inter- ForKT view yesterday. Miss Graham and her troupe will present a program To Aid Ch mes at 8:30 p.m. tomorrow in Pattengill Auditorium which will include ex- pressions of the war in Spain, unem- Faculty, Studints Wot ployment and the struggle for world as peace. With Local Groups T The first number on the program, Raise$1,000 Here "Preludium," Miss Graham described __s______ as "a greeting and an introduction." Immediately following this the whole Tickets are now on sale for t group of 12 women dancers will pre- I lecture by Dr. T. Z. Koo, Chine sent "Celebration," a lyric dance of educator and youth leader,-, at 7: rejoicing. Tiss Graham said that pm. Tuesday'in Hill Auditorium. T re~jicin. Tis Grham aid hatticket sale is part o h rv this type of dance could be compared riset s100 fs ar of the drivem to a lyric poem, expressing a feeling $1,000 for the relief of stude of joy rather than suggesting a deep in China. emotion or serious idea. Clarence Kresin, '38, is chairman emoton r sriou ida. he cmmiteein carg ofthe drip "Frontier," the next number, is theand committee charge of treasur one of the most famous of Miss Gra-an Mrs. Mabel Rhead is ham's creations. It is expressive of The committee includes represent the spirit of the American frontier, 'tives of leading student, faculty a she said, an idea which needs no ex- community organizatio s. planation for Americans but which Since many of China's universit I. e r k he ese 45 he to nts of ve, er. a- nd ices NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J., March 26.-(P)-Capturng the 400-yard re- lay, final event on the program, Mich- igan tonight retained its National Collegiate A.A. swimming champion- ship. The Wolverines scored 46 points to 45 for Ohio State. Michigan's quartet of Waldemar Tomski, Edward Hutchens, Thomas Haynie and Edward Kirar thrashed through the Rutgers pool in 3:33.2. Harvard, anchored by Charley Hut- ter, closed fast to beat out Ohio State, which could have won the meet for the first time in history by plac- ing second in the final event. It was the ninth championship in the fifteen years of the N.C.A.A. meet for the Wolverines. Ohio State, the favorite, beat Michigan twice this year in dual meets Harvard, with 36 points, was third, followed by Princeton with 22, Yale with 18, Iowa with 7 and Rutgers with five. Kirar, who retained two individual titles, was timed, in 52 seconds flat -seven-tenths of a second faster than his winning time in the 100 yard free style-in thrashing out the final leg of the relay. Tomski had started Michigan off to a slight lead, but Ohio State was neck and neck before Kirar uncorked his great drive and Hutter outswam Wil- liam Neunzig, Ohio State anchor man. Kirar, Michigan captain, became the first double champion of the swimming carnival tonight, retain- ing his 100-yard free style title in 52.7 seconds. Kirar, taking the lead on the first 25 yards, beat out Harvard's Charley Hutter by a foot in a driving finish. Kirar yesterday retained his fifty- yard championship. Powerful Dick Hough of Prince- i tan won as expected in the 200-yard was completely misunderstood by the New Loan laRn'German dancer, Yvonne Georgi, when she_witnessed it some time ago. To Opposition Expressed To Further T a x Increase Goering Warns For The Little Fellow WASHINGTON, March 26.--UP- Austrian Jews The Administration asked Congress A d C h today to authorize a virtually unlim- ited program of Government loans to ____ business and a resumption of self- liquidating loans to public bodies. Catholics Told To Follow T h e Administration's proposal Hitler; No Compromise would enable the Reconstruction Fi- nance Corporation to make business Is Offered To Church oans on a long-term basis meeting( and colleges have been destroyed by the Japanese, temporary university districts have been set up in the in- terior. The purpose of the $25.000 national campaign is to keep these institutions functioning. C. T. Wang, Chinese Ambassador to the United States, has written a letter to the local committee, say- ing, "Since the outbreak of hostilities between China and Japan, Chinese educational and cultural institutions have been marked by the Japanese for destruction. "Students are ejected from their schools," continues the ambassador, and "no stress on the imagination 4s needed to realize the necessity for their relief. Your undertaking in PulpitsTodayv Guest Speakers To Preach' To Unitarian, Catholic And Episcopal Groups Visiting churchmen will fill three local pulpits today. "Social Gospel Applied" will be the topic of the sermon by Homer Martin, president of the United Auto- mobile Workers of America and for- mer pastor of a Baptist Church in Leeds, Kansas, at the 11 a.m. service of the Unitarian Church. Mr. Mar- tin will preside at a question period to begin at 2 p.m. in the Church Library. The Rt. Rev. Bishop Herman Page, Bishop of the Diocese of Michigan, will administer the rite of confirma- tion at the 11 a.m. service of St. An- drew's Episcopal Church. At this time, 45 candidates will be admitted to the fellowship of the church. The Bishop will also address the men of" St. Andrew's Church at a special Par- . I i ,INA .c 6.R-ei hirbhl em o ems o- aaWa , . directly the complaint of many busi- bVIENNA, March 26.-P)-Rei- their behalf seems to be most com, breast stroke, beating out Johnny ness men that such credits were not gious groups in Austria received a mendable and I wish you all success. Higgins of Ohio State by ten feet. available. Nazi ultimatum tonight when Nazi- --Hough was clocked in 223.4. Justin The RFC would be given power al- dom's s, Callahan of Columbia was third and so to buy securities of private corpor- Marshal General Hermann Goering, J John Haigh of Michigan fourth. ations, opening the way for capital told the Jews to get out of Austria Ae -L wa Hough succeeded Jack Kasley of loans for expansion and new con- and the Church that although it 1 (Continued on Page 9) struction. Small business men have would receive "the protection it de- Totaltarian sm complained to the Government that serves, there would be no compromise capital for those purposes was diffi- with it in matters concerning govern--- .Th cult to obtain except in large quain- ment. Electric Utilities Control tities. In a smashing, plebiscite campaign Under existing law the. RFC is pro- speech to 50,000 Austrians who wel- Taken OverBy State For Open H ouse hibited from making loans maturing comed him to Vienna as Our Her- later than Jan. 31, 1945. The total mann," he declared: of all private loans outstanding can "Vienna was not a German city Parlyament ended an historic session Open House Will Feature not be more than $300,000,000. Both because 300,000 Jews live here. Vien- tonight by taking the nation far E restrictions would be eliminated un- na must become German again. The along the road to totalitarianism. Exhibits And Dancing der the Administration proposal. Jew must know we do not care to live The last bill enacted was a gov- , O with him. He must go." rnment measure to transfer entire he Unions annual spring pen Referrin to the church. he said io ntrol of Japan's huge electric in- House, featuring new exhibits, free ers-attented th e mass ic called by the General Confederation: of Labor which has 5,000,000 -follow-! ers. Labor's dissatisfaction was due in part to the failure of parliament to pass the labor code proposed by For~- mer Premier Camille Chautemps.- SRA Will Hold ReligionForuimi Parker, Durfee And Isaacs' Will Speak Today I: it ish dinner to be given at the Mich- WASHINGTON, March 26.-)wereio-that "probably the clericals will be dustry from private hands to the igan Union at 1 p.m. There were increasing indications to- ready to make peace when they real- state. Trap Government Forces There will be a tea and reception day that Congres swould not stand ize we have no desire to destroy their Also voted was the bitterly con- In Mountains for the Confirmation Class at 4 p.m. for any higher tax levies on the "lit-i s." tested national mobilization bill to in Harris Hall. At 7 p.m. the Epis- tle fellow ' this year, when House The Cardinal directed that Catho- give the government unlimited pow- HENDAYE, France (At the Span- copal Student Guild will be host to members and many Senators are up lies "follow the greater German state er to draft Japan's manpower and ish Frontier)-March 27.-(Sunday) the International Student Fellowship, for reelection. and its Fuehrer unreservedly." economic resources in a war emer- -(A)-EbatledGovrnmnt roosalso in Harris Hall. William H. Wor- The Senate Finance Committee, gny -(A?)-Embattled Government troops, rell, professor of Semitics, will ad- now studying the House-approved Goering outlined Germany's great- Igency. numbering between 10,000 and 20, dress the group on "Education and Tax Revision Bill, soon will vote on er Austria program, said the courts' The whole session, the regular 000, were reported trapped in theReshg p Ed." a proposal by Senator LaFollette. (Continued on Page 7) 1937-38 meeting, was marked by con- d bReligion." I lc ewe h aie n h e- Alcubierre Mountains early today by oftbhwe(Progt Wis.) to reduce personal i- ite dshe cabinetwand the leg- Inugnthressepigestad Archbishop Edward Mooney of the (ro. Ws) o euc eronlin- Inugn odssepn atad(Continued on Prge 2; come tax exemptions. Angell *lbo SpeakL ; islature, dissension between the toward the Mediterranean. - -sdd PThe proposal would reduce the r'-"e l houses and strife among the parties While Insurgent commanders re- INDEPENDENTS TO MEET $2,500 exemption for married per- At Hillel Today in the lower house. ported Government defenders in There will be a meeting of the Ann sons to $2,000 and the $1,000 exemp- ____ o a "compeIte rout" along sections of the Arbor Independents at 5 p.m. Tues- tion fo rsingle individuals to $800. It Prof. Robert C. Angell of the so- Death Of Student 135-mile Aragon front, two Insurgent day in the League, it was announced would bring thousands of new tax- ciology department will talk on "The columns were said to have encircled yesterday. payers under the income levy. Problems of Social Disintegration" ati In Spain Denied ghe the Hillel Forum at 8 p.m. today. All S go e T Festival T students are invited to attend. Elman A. Service, '39, of Tecumseh, BARCELONA, March 26.-UP)_I a eo IS ,VIeeran, Professor Angell said yesterday who was reported by metropolitan Thousands of civilians were rushed , . 1 -' that he will show how we are tearing papers to have been killed in action in to the western border of Catalonia to- M artineli And Bonelio Trail H IM or civilization apart by war and ap- Spain while serving in the Loyalist day to build government rearguard aiproaching another dark age. He armies, is not known to be either fortifications against the wave of agrees with H. G. Wells and other missing or dead, according to a tele- advancing Insurgents. To Chase Baron.eo, University! Stock that played throughout the prominent sociologists on the theory gram received here frohn the Friends At the same time Government lead- graduate and Metropolitan Opera ;Festival, as the Chicago Civic Opera that we are disintegrating rather of the Abraham Lincoln Brigade in ers stressed the necessity for two new Company bass, goes the honor of hav- vied with the Metropolitan in num- than making progress. I New York. divisions totaling 60,000 men to form ing participated in more May Festival ber of stars participating. Service went to Spain last June shock troops. This was in accordance concerts of recent years than any Steady improvement in both qual- AY, to volunteer in the International Bri- with Defense Minister Indalecio other soloist on the 1938 program. ity and quantity of performers is not- Arrest Youth Atte i gade. He left a few weeks after Prieto's new slogan: Close behind him, however, are two ed yearly in the stories told by the Robbery Of Music Store Ralph Neafus, '36F&C, who was re- of his colleagues with the compan yellowed pages of the Daily. This ported captured at Calanda two weeks .isanni Martuei etern themanor year President Charles A. Sink of the Attempted robbery of the Schae- ago. Service was known to be driv- Avi - A r.d- .tC t A tAAi Giovanni Martineli, veteran tenor I ,,i nci l fh--m.n~.a ... mil h a a tl?~r. Trm- rz x,44Fat.T r r_. ,- ,__>_ dancing and reduced rates in all rc reational rooms, will be held from 1 7:30 until 10 p.m. Thursday, it ,was announced yesterday. Most schools on the campus will be represented and each will persent some new exhibits, James Wills, '40E, and Jack Knecht, '40E, co-chairman for the affair, promised. All engineering groups-civil, aero- nautical, mechanical and chemical- will have exhibits, as will the physics department, the forestry school and the geology department. A scale ;model of the Paris Gun will also be shown. IThe Varsity Glee Club will give a free concert during the evening and tickets to regular Union membership "Religion; Common-ground or Bat- t tleground" will be discussed by Prof. DeWitt Parker of the philosophy de- partment, Prof. Edgar N. Durfee of the Law School and Dr. Raphael Isaacs of the Simpson Memorial Hos- I pital at the third in a series of Inter- Faith Symposiums sponsored by thef Student Religious Association at 3 p.m. today at Lane Hall. The discussion will attempt to an- swer the questions: "Is there a valid , conflict between revealed religions?"j and "Can these religions be drawn together on a basis of common revela-I tion for united action on some ques- I . t r -I ,' dances will be awarded those who hold lucky programs. Prediet Inflation Needed In Mexico MEXICO CITY, March 26.-()- Financial circles predicted today Mexico would be forced to resort to controlled inflation to ease the mone- tary situation precipitated by expro- priation of the foreign oil industry. The predictions came from bankers I sh a cnid thev wre hased nrimarily I