The Weather MAL!- ~4ait Editorials The State Of FranIk VOL. XLVIIIL No. 95 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, FEB. 15, 1938 PRICE FIVE CENTS f,.i. -.G l n7.7 AA AT Ill .4 Farm Bill Sent To Roosevelt After Congress VotesApproval New Crox Control Measure Passes Senate, 56 To 31, Despite Heated Attacks Com proiui*e Act To Limit Production WASHINGTON, Feb. 14.- (P) - A crop control bill, praised as "the best farm bill ever enacted" and de- nounced as "regimentation" ant "more harness" for the farmer, re- ceived final Congressional approval today The me'asure, establishing a sys- tem under which the Secretary of Agriculture, in cooperation with farmer committees, may prescribe limitations upon the quantity of wheat, corn, cotton, rice and to- bacco grown or marketed, now goes to the White House for the expected signature of President Roosevelt. The last step in its tortuus our- ney' through Congress which began in mid-November, was taken when the Senate adopted a comprmoiise ,easure, 56 to 31. The compropIs is based upon the conflicting bills passed originally by House and Sen- ate. While the bill establishes vary- ing approaches for each of the crops affected, in general it directs the Secretary of Agriculture to make an etimate of the expected supply, set phis figure against expected demand and adjust production acordingly. Ti*s would be done by paying benefits to farmers whoaplanted no more than a specified acreage. In addition, in years of bumper crops, the Secretary of Agriculture would be empowered to fix marketin qutotas, limiting the quantities that could be sld and thereby protecting the price. Such quotas would be d- pendent on a two-thirds vote .: Zmers taking part in special refer- enda. , - Because of the big crops of the fa year, the Administration began' agitaig for farm legislation next spring, to replace the old Agriculture Adjustment Act invalidated by the{ supreme Court. Congress agreed u, make the legislation the first order of business upon reconvening, and President Rooevelt called a special session last fall to deal with this,' among other problems. Before Christmas, divergent bills were approved by both House and Senate after much stormy debate. Ullon reconvening after the. holidays a conference committee representing both Houses took up the task of working the provisions of the two measures into one bill. In so doing they incurred the wrath of dairy and cattle interests by. eliminating provisions, contained in ,both bills, preventing farmers from going into the dairying or cat- tle raising business on land with- drawn from crop production. Road Engineers To Hold Annual: Meeting Toda y -i ne ura itian' treets iNetv Gria nope na iMrs. * I* Crisler Not Ready To Name. Aides; Doesn't Expect To Be 'Miracle Man' Says He Has Not Invited' Any Former Assistant To Follow Him Here Herbert 0. (Fritz) Crisler, Mich- igan's new head football coach, yes- terday declared that he is unprepared as yet to formulate his staff of as- sistants. "I haven't made any recom- mendations to the board because I'm not quite ready on them." Crisler further stated that he had' not asked Tad Weiman or any of his other Princeton assistants to accom- pany him to Michigan. "They're being considered as my successor at Prince- ton." He indicated that action at Princeton would largely influence his ieicmmerdatons. Besides Weiman Cris4er had Earl Martincau and Campbell Dickson, backfield and end coach respectively, assisting him in the East. Crisler arrived in town yesterday morning with Mrs. Crisler and spent a busy day with University author- ities, newspapermen. Michigan alumni and Varsity football candidates. e was favorably received by all and ex- pressed his pleasdre at being associat- ed with Michigan. At the meeting of the gridders he ".old of the signal distinction it was to begin his football career under Amos Alonzo Stagg, former venerable coach at Chicago, and now to work under Fielding H. Yost, another im- posing gridiron figure in Conference football. He stressed the value of de- siring to play the game. "If there's my team on next year's schedule any of you think you can't beat, you might as well not come out," he told his moen. Crirler was hesitant in speaking about his football aides. "I'd lik'e to familiarize myself with the problem here before deciding just what as- 'Istants I need," he said.j Today he expects to confer with athleti cofficials on various mattersj regarding his new job. He will be guest of honor at a banquet of Mich- igan alumni at Flint tonight. To-' morrow he is slated to attend a lunch- eon given by the Detroit group of %lumni. Then he plans to return to Princeton to wind up his business there. Tryouts Invited For aazti Tryouts for the proposed student titerary magazine will be interviewed .,t 5 p.m. today and tomorrow in Room 3218 Angell Hall, the committee ap- pointed by the Board in Control of Student Publications announced yes- terday. Although a special call was made to high school and junior college mag- azine editors, the committee explained that experience is not necessary and that questioning would attempt to determine the applicant's ability. The committee consists of three members of the English Journal Club -Giovanni Giovannini, Morris Green- Two Campus Unknowns Get Crislers' Dinner Bid Two anonymous Michigan students may be the honored dinner guests of Coach and Mrs. Herbert 0. Crisler if they will reveal their identity to the newly-appointed Wolverine men- tor. Coach Crisler yesterday reiterat- ed an offer he made in the accom- panying interview by Elsie Pierce Begle. "I don't quite remember the young man's name," Crisler said. "But I tihink he said he was in the Law School and that he played baseball. His name might have been Cowan. We gave him a lift from Miami to some- where in Georgia during the holidays. He was in the South for the Michigan State-Auburn Orange Bowl game, and get on the wrong team, I believe." Crisler met the young lady on a train en route from Ann Arbor two weeks ago. "She said she'd like to see Tom Hamilton hired as the new foot- ball coach," Michigan's coach re- called. "I asked her what she thought of the others considered, and when she got around to me, whatever vanity I might have had certainly disap- peared. I believe she siod she was ~rom Mempiis, although I'm not ~sure."~ Neither of the students knew who Crisler was. Ipatieff Wl Le ek r 'o Lecture Today Famous Chemist To Deal With Molecules Dr. Vladimir N. Ipatieff, Professor )f Chemistry at Northwestern Univer- sity and Director of Chemical Re- search for the Universal Oil Products Company, will give a University lec- ture on "The Catalytic Alkalyzation of Paraffin and Naphthenes" at 4:15 pim. today in the Chemical Amphi- theatre. Dr. Ipatieff occupies a high place in modern chemistry, and his dis- coveries have been the basis for many industrial processes, particularly in the refining of petroleum. In this field he has made great contributions through his methods of condensation and polymerization, which make it possible to convert waste refinery gases into valuable high-gfirade com- mercial gasolines. In addition he synthesized isoprene, "mother hy $'o- gen rubber," and made many discov- eries known well by chemists and chemical engineers. Dr. Ipatieff is known international- ly, having received honorary degrees from the Universities of Munich and Strasbourg, and having been named Commander of the Legion of Honoi by the French government. Prize Soviet Film To Be Shown Here I; 4 Induced To Accept Post Only After Promise Of Directorship In Future EDITOR'S NOTE: Mrs. Bedle, editor of the Daily of 1936-37, nvw a resident of Princeton, N. J, interviewed Michigan's new coach jst before he left the Uni- versity for which he formrnily coached). PRINCETON, N.J., Feb. 13.- (Special to the Daily)-Herbert O. (Fritz) Crisler doesn't expect to be a "miracle man" his first season at Michigan, but he's going to do his best to make a creditable show- ing." So he expressed himself to F. L. Redpath, sports editor of The Daily Princetonian, and this writer just before he left for Ann Arbor. He hopes he'll have the utmost in cooperation from students and al- iamni, he said, and he thinks he'll get it too. "I know of no other col- lege except Princeton which has a more devoted group of alumni than Michigan-and with Princeton al- umni it's more than devotion, it's emotional hysteria," he said. He does think it ironic that he should be going to Michigan though, for he started his career under Stagg at Chicago, and in those days there were no moresbitter football rivals in the business than Stagg and Fielding H. Yost. Crisler graduated from Chicago in 1922, where he first coached. Later he went to Minne- sota and came to Princeton in 1932. The consensus around Princetonj s that Crisler, despite poor prospects for the '38 season here, was induced o go to Michigan only by the offer of the job as Director of Atheltics when Fielding H. Yost retires. Right now Crisler will become an associate professor as -well as head coach. He doesn't intend to0keep on coaching (Continued on Page 6) BECKWITH DIES George W. Beckwith, former county Sclerk and long-time member of the county board of supervisors, died yes- terday morning after an illness of three months. Worid Parley OnArmament Called Futile' tonyress Leaders Sound PesMimi tic Note; RecaP Failures Of_1922, 1935 100,000 Methodist Youths Won't Fight WASHINGTON, Feb. 14.-P(A)- Tongressiona lheaders who customar- ly reflect the Administration's view n foreign relations agreed today that 'nother disarmament conference or vorld naval powers would be "futile.' Chairman McReynolds (Dem. renn.) of the House Foreign Affain Committee informed reporters aftei t visit to the White House that he knew a call for a conference was "noi in the wind bcause a conferenc could not be had at this time with ny success." "Limitation Impossible" Chairman Pittman (Dem., Nev.) o the Senate Foreign Relations Com- mittee, equally cool toward a confer- ence, told newsmen: "If it was impossible by reason of distrust and fear to accomplish a sub- tantial limitation of arms in 1922- when there was no threat of war-and in 1935, then there can be no hope it present for success. Starting their third week of hear- ings on a program to authorize 47 new warships, 22 auxiliaries and 1,- 000 airplanes, naval committeemet jousted verbally with a 20-year-ol' Frank Littell, a student at Union The- clogial Seminary in New York, and 'hairman of the National CQpncil of Methodist Youth. Would Not Go To War They listened with obvious amaze- ment to his statement that he would not go to war against an invader, even to protect hisa mother and sis- teIs. "An attempt to increase military appropriatiops," he added, "is noth- ing but an anti-social action in view of unemployment and relief needs," The Methodist Youth Council, with perhaps 100,000 members in 30 states, he said, is pledged not to fight in any war in the Orient. Robson Claims A U.S., British A. lign.mentVital Says Both Countries Face Dangers From Spread Of Fascism, Nationalism The United Statesand Great Britain. which have stood together in recent world troubles because of economic interests, may be coming to the time when they are aligned in lefense of their common ideal of de- mocracy, in the opiniono of Dr. Wil- liam A. Robsono of the London School of Economics and Political Science, who is in Ann Arbor to give a Uni, versity lecture. Dr. Robson will speak on "Democ- racy in England" at 4:15 p.m. today in the Natural Science Auditorium. The time has come, Dr. Robson dated, when both England and the United States face dangers from the pread of fascism and nationalism whi;h they may not be able to effec- lively withstand without some indica- tion of unity. Though England may have more to fear from a military (Continued on Page 3) ii Every one of the fifty-five dollars =ollected by the Progressive Club in i campus-wide drive on Jan. 6 will ither "save three .persons from tet- nus, make possible ten to fifteen ainless operations" or "save at least wo-thousand burn cases." That information was sent to the 'rogressive Club recently by D. Co Pui, executive chairman of the Amer- can Bureau for Medical Aid to China. n a letter thanking the local m'gani- ,ation for its "unsolicited contribu- ion." The money will be used to pur- :hase "anesthetics, antiseptics and erum for the treatment of the un- fortunate." Appoint Bennett To Architecture School Deanship Regents Accept U.S. Navy Donation Of Maichnery To Engineering Shops The title of Prof. Wells I. Bennett, vho has been heading the architee- ure school for a year under the title of "director," was changed by the 3oard of Regents at their regular neeting Friday. Dean Bennett, who has been teach- ng since 1912, was named chairman if the college's executive committee n 1936 and director of the college in January, 1937. The change gives the architecture wchools status eiual to that of the College of Engineering, of which it was formerly a department. More than $11,000 in gifts was ac- ,epted by the Regents at the meeting. Six thousand dollars of this amount ,as given in equipment to the engi- neering shops. The United States Navy Yard at Washington presented the metal pro- essing department with two engine lathes, a turret lathe, a drill slotting machine, a drill press and a vertical milling machine. This machinery is valued at $5,900. The same depart- ment also received other equipment valued at $150 from the Pratt and Whitney Co., Hartford, Conn., and Prof. O. W. Boston, head of the de- oartment, gave two timers valued at $50. The mechanical engineering depart- ment received gifts of equipment valued at $145. These presentations came from the General Electric Co.; the Bendix Products Co., South Bend, Ind. and the Chevrolet Motor Co. Three thousand dollars was given by the Charles Lathrop Pack Forestry (Continued on Page 3) Heart Disease Takes McMath Scientist Was A Co-D nor Of Observatory Francis Charles McMath, 71, in- ternationally-known engineer, astro- nomer, and co-donor of the MMath- Hulbert Observatory at Lake Angelus, near Pontiac, died at 4 p.m. Sunday in a Detroit hospital from heart trouble. The McMath-Hulbert Observatory was given to the University in 1931 by Mr. McMath, his son Robert R. Mc- Math, and Judge Henry S. Hulbert and is now valued at about $150,000 Mr. McMath was honorary curator oi University observatories, and his son is both an honorary curator and ac- tive director of the McMath-Hulbert Observatory. In his work in the field of astro- nomy, Mr. McMath was well-known for the development of a successful method for taking moving pictures of the heavenly bodies. This work wa begun and was carried, on in coopera- tion with his son and Judge Hulbert at the observatory at Lake Angelus. In 1933 Mr. McMath was given .he Wetherill Medal by the Franklin In- stitute of Philadelpkia in.recognition of his astronomical phoulgraphy. In ,ha'ornn ,,n.. l'. ,honimi ..~ mm Title Chances Fade As Hawkeyes Trip Wolverines, 38-30 _ i Campus Aid To China Receives Tui's Thanks Aggressive Iowans, Bad Shooting Send Cagers Into A 4th Place Tie lake's 15 Points Ted By Stephens By IRIN LISAGOR (Daily Sports Editor) Iowa's aggressive Hawkeyes dealt Michigan's cagers a stunning upset blow in Yost Field House last night as hey out-scrapped the stodgy Wolver- -nes to win 38-30. Defeat sent Coach Cappon's charges spinning into a fourth-place tie with Minnesota, and almost totally obscured their title outlook, Except for a brief scoring sortie in the second period, Michigan's at- tack never clicked. Using a compact defense, and sparing few feelings in ,heir rough contacts, the Iowans 'ractically nullified the Varsity's of- Dense around the basket and from afar, the local lads were as cold as i pawnbroker's heart. Only a cursory glance at statistics will reveal the Wolverines' shortcom- ings. They made only eight out of 00 shots count from the field, A per- ,etage like that is a losing one in any league. In the last half, close- :heking Iowa guards permitted them only two buckets. A black-thatched speedster named 3en Stephens was one reason Mich- gan was kept in arrears throughout nost of the game. The Hawkeye for- yard acquired a total of 15 points for ,he evening, including six field goals. Capt. Jake Townsend obtained the lame number of points, seven of which- vere charity flips. That, together vith the fact that the two men guard- ing him committed seven fouls be- ween them, indicates Jake's diffl- :ulty. After see-sawing in the first eight minutes ;the tide of battle strictly favored Iowa, which .-finished the stanza with a 16-11 lead, Not con- ent with that, Coach Rollie Williams' oys forged a lead more satisfactory And were ahead, 21-15. Michigan relied upon free throws (ontinued onPage 6) Talk By Rowell To Head Spring SRA Program Peace Council To Include All Sympathetic Groups On CampusIs Planned Dr. Terecina Rowell, who recently .pent a year in a Buddhist monastery in Japan, will discuss "Buddhism and Varxism" at 8 p.m. tomorrow in Lane lall tinder the auspices of- the Stu- lent Religious Association. The announcement of the lecture olowed a meeting o the freshman Yommittee of the council of the SR.A, Saturday and Sunday at the Fresh Air "amp on Patterson Lake where plans or the coming semester were made. Other .lecturers the Assocaton glans to bring to Ann Arbor ineclde Mortimer Adler of Chicago University, Ludwig Lewisohn, noted author, To- Harris, author of "Unholy Pilgrim- age," a book about the individual in Soviet Russia, and Ralph McCallister, chairman of the adult education ouncil of Chicago. An Association Peace Council is be- ng planned which will attempt to in- Jude all campus organizations inter- ested in peace work. The S.A.A. will cooperate with the Y.M.C.A. in a :tate-wide drive to raise funds for Japanese and Chinese students. Two per cent of the money is to go to Japan and the rest is to be used to Furnish transportation, food and shel- ter for the Chinese. Sociology studies in Detroit, To- ledo and Ann Arbor will be sponsored by the Association, it was announced. This work will be done in coopera- zion with social service organizations in Ann Arbor. Extra-curricular classes in the his- tory of religion, comparative religion and the Bible will be held this se- (Continued on Page 2) anzion Wing Completion r" fj it,.m~gtJ RvR~c~n* Conference Will Include Three Days Of Talks On Road Improvement Michigan's 24th annual Highway Conference opens at 1:30 p.m. today with a speech by State Highway Com- missioner Murray D. Van Wagoner-on "The Cross Roads of Highway Admin- istration." The conference will include three days of lectures and discussions on the improvement of highways and highway safety in the State. In connection with the meeting the State Highway Department has ar- ranged an exhibit in the Union lounge portraying scenes along Michigan highways demonstrating the large percentage of driving that is recrea- tional. Under the direction of the College of Engineering, the annual gathering of highway engineers and traflic ex- perts was planned in cooperation with the Michigan State Highway Depart- ment, the Michigan Association of Road Commissioners and Engineers and the Michigan Department of Public Safety. Other speakers at today's session are H. S. Fairbank, Chief of the Di- ..ci- of Tnfnrain T a RirAIof it Loyalists Indomitable Courage' Impresses Ann Arbor Volunteer The indomitable courage of the Spanish people's army, "growing in numbers and experience every day," is being impressed unforgettably into the experience of Robert A. Cummins of Ann Arbor, senior editorial writer for the Daily last year, now fighting with the Loyalist army. In a letter to one of his student friends, Cummins describes the long line (the people's army) that knew many "among it were living the last 15 minutes of their lives, but there was none who did not subordinate that thought to his determination to save his people from fascism." Cummins, with Elman Service, '37, and Ralph Neafus, '37, joined the In- ternational Brigade upon his gradua- tion last semester and is now a brigade often than you probably believe. I am touched when you say that "Mattes, Tenander, Silverman . . . the old bunch are very anxious over you." Within the last few days I have, at different times wondered whether Scammon got an A from Ehrmann (I got a B); how is Pete Lisagor's pool game; and wished Tuure were here to give his imitation of the cat. "The only news I have had of pro- gressive activities on the campus was the swell story of the Daduk meeting. My sister sent me one copy of the Daily-a late October issue, edited (apparently in haste and despair dur- ing the later stages) by-. "We were in action 11 days in the latter part of October outside Zara- goza-a few kilometers. The Brigade ixr.% crn the A,'ragnf,rntfar . lmn-qtin 7 I