The Weather Showers and thunderstorms today and probably tomorrow.. L ILitt Ap 3Datt Editorials Marriage Problems .,. In The Navy Now.... I P VOL. XLVIL No. 153 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, MAY 4, 1938$ PRICE FIVE CENTS Japs' Offense Near Collapse, Chinese Claim Defeat Of Nipponese Last Month Was Their Worst In Modern-Day History 800,000 Sino Troops Ready For Offense SHANGHAI, May 4.-(P- (Wed- nesday)--()-Chinese sent word to- day the second Japanese offensive in southern Shantung province, the pivotal front of the war, was on the verge of collapse. Crushing of the first drive last month was the most disastrous de- feat of a modern Japanese army. Now Chinese declare that they are ready to send 800,000 troops against the reinforced Japanese legions which, they say, are wearied to ex- haustion and again running short of munitions. Chinese reports from Hankow, tem- porary seat of the government, said sensational Chinese leaders had brok- en the Shantung staleiate and the great offensive already had been lainched to take advantage of the gains. War dispatches said Japanese liner had been pierced for a distance of Seven miles between Taierhchwang, where the first Japanese offensive came to grief, and Pihsien, 15 miles to the southeast in Kiangsu prov- ince. Japanese dispatches did not men- tion the Shantung province fighting and neutral sources as yet have been unable to confirm the reports of Chi- - nese gains. Chinese declared Japanese suffered heavy casualties and' were fighting a rearguard action to cover a north- ward retreat from their salient aimed at the vita least-west Lungs ai rail- road. In the Tancheng sector, 22 miles north of the Lunghai on the eastern side of the narrow Japanese salient, Chinese declared that 1,000 Japanese had died in fierce hand-to-hand en- counters. Matowchen, six miles northwest, they said; was bin besieged and Tancheng itself Was completely en- circled, blocking the Japanese from any attempt to sidestep to the east to escape a frbntal attack on their broken central lines. Prof. Johnston Receives $250 Russoe Award Selected For Meritorious Researc h in Pathology, PhysiologyOf The Heart Prof. Franklin Davis Johnston of the edical School yesterday was an- nounced the winner of the Henry Rus- sel award for this year as Prof. Heber D. Curtis of the astronomy depart- ment gave the 13th annual Russel Lecture at 4:15 p.m. in the Natural Science Auditorium. Professor Johnston received the award of $250 which is 'egarded as a local nobel prize, presented to an assistant professor or instructor whose work in scholarly activities merits recognition, for his research in the physiology and pathology of the heart. Professor Curtis, chosen to give the annual lecture by the Council of the Research Club of the University /for scholarly work, spoke on "Reced- ing Horizons" in which he prophesied that the theory of an expanding uni- verse, adhered to by many believers in the relativity theory, will in future years be looked on as illogical. Professor Johnston was graduated from the University in 1922 with a bachelor's degree in electrical engi- neering, and in 1929 he received his Doctor of Medicine degree here. His knowledge of electrical apparatus has made him especially qualified to deal with different aspects of heart dis- ease, especially in relaton' to me- chanical devices such as the electro- cardiograph, according to Hospital officials. Two Professors Receive Citations Prof. e .eritus Louis P. hall of the dental school and Prof.-eineritus Ed- win C. Goddard of the Law School last night received honorary citations for outstanding work in civic organiza- 'Mind Waves' TheoryAuthor To Talk Here Prof. J. B. Rhine of Duke Univer- sity, stbrm center of scientific and intellectual circles because of his al- legedly revolutionary theories on ex- tra-sensory perception will appear at 4:15 p.m. tomorrow in Natural Science Auditorium to answer charges of his critics and explain "The Controversy over Extra-Sensory Perception." His experimnents and results, which have split professors on this and oth- er campi throughout the country into two faction, pr'ove, Professor Rhine asserts, that some persons are capable of receiving information either from physical objects or from minds of others, instead of through recog- nized sensory channels. A recently organized group here, the Parapsychology Club, consists of about 20 members including profes- sors in the engineering college, the mathematics department and the physics department, sme of whon are convinced of the validity of ESP theories and others of whom are skep- tical but feel that the subject is worthy of attention. Students Start Press Meeting Here Tomorrow High School Journalists Of Michigan To Discuss Newspaper Problems More than 650 members of high school publications affiliated with the Michigan Interscholastic Press Asso- ciation will attend the group's con- vention to be held tomorrow, Friday and Saturday under the sponsorship of the journalism department. The convention will bring to Ann Arbor a gathering of' the representa- tives of newspapers, magazines and yearbooks of Michigan secondary schools to discuss the problems and special topics of their publications in general assemblies, addresses and round-table groups. The program will open at 4:30 p.m., tomorrow witha general assembly in She Union Ballroom. Miss Thelma McAndless, of Roosevelt High School in Ypsilanti, will preside and Prof. Donald Hamilton Haines, of the journalism department, will give the address of welcome. Following the reception, the 'delegates will be shown through the Student Publications Building. On Friday a general assembly will be held at 1:30 p.m. in the Union Ballroom, with Professor Haines pre- siding. Round-table discussions will be held on poetry, wise economies, 'tumor, trouble shooting, crime and news, book reviews, creative writing, annuals and publications and the community in the afternoon. The annual banquet will be held at 6:15 p.m. at which Professor Haines will again preside. A dance will follow. o--ItCon ttinues StrikeHearin Wi~i.te Says Ivestigators Did Not Visit Shop WASHINGTON, May 3.-/-(/I'-The National Labor Relations Board's hearings of unfair labor practices against the Ann Arbor Press of Ann Arbor, Mich., continued today as wit- nesses were questioned to determine whether the company is engaged in interstate commerce and subject to "he Wagner Ac. George W. Massnick, sales manager of a Bay City, Mich., housing concern, testified that his company bought catalogs through the Ann Arbor Press and distributed 75 per cent of them outside Michigan. rthur J.WilSe co-owner of the Ann Arbor Press, disputed with the NLRB examiner over his right to enter critical remarks of the hearing into the record. Wiltse charged that board representatives "investigated the Ann Arbor Press for three months without coming to the shop." Prof. Ward Will Receive Hi'dhDental Honor Today prof. Marcus L. Ward, Jonathan Taft Professor of Dentistry, will re- Student Senate ScoresCampus Party Politics Book Prices Committee' Proposes Cooperative Undr Right Set Up 10 Proposals Give By Housing Sectioni Rolling up its sleeves and doffing its coat the Student Senate last night, in a long and sultry session, waded into the question of campus politics and passed a recommenda- tion for the abolition of the pres- ent Men's Council and all class of- ficers below senior rank. Calling the present system "um- bersome, wasteful and futile," Irving Silverman, '38, chairman of the Sen- ate Politics Committee, charged that class offices, with the exception of senior positions, are empty honors which cannot justify their own exist- ence. He urged the creation of a men's undergraduate body, similar to the one extant at the League, which would administer men's activities, and in conjunction with the League representatives, assume complete re- sponsibility for the coordination of all campus activities. The proposed joint council, he said, would oversee the appointment or election of class, dance chairmen, which he contended was the sole function of the tradi- tional class office hierarchy. Book Prices Committee The Book Prices Committee, under the chairmanship of John O'Hara, '40,, proposed a cooperative book ex-, change, providing a barter market where students could leave their books for resale at their own price. O'Hara pointed out that virtually every, other Big Ten university enjoyed such an exchange and said that the Union had expressed willingness to coop- erate with any group which wished to undertake the movement at Mich- igan. The plan at present, he said, is before the Board of Regentis, but will not be acted upon before next fall, thereby precluding the possibil- ity of the exchange until February of next year. Housing Report The Senate ° ousing Committee, under the chairmanship of Allen Braun, '40, presented a list of 10 recommendations, incorporated as follows: (1)' another hearing to be held May 10, at which time complete reports from Jack Davis, '39, and Miriam Hall, '39, be received (2) that Dr. Lloyd R. Gates, Sanitarian, Health Service, be invited to present a report on sanitary conditions in rooming houses, (3) that a' repre- sentative of the Regents and/or of the finance committee of the State legislature be present to speak of the possibility of getting Federal or State aid for local housing, (5) that mem- bers of the economics department and other authorities be invited to the next hearing to state whether or not, as Prof. John Shepard of the psy- chology department has said, our present economic system cannot pro- vide adequate housing, () that a representative of the Alumni Asso- ciation be inyited to report on the likelihood of receiving individual do- nations for dormitories, (7) that a committee see Governor Murphy pur- suant to the housing problem, (8) that the University grade rooning houses, posting the grades with the rent, (9) that the University list all houses available for cooperatives, (10) that a permanent housing lconnis- sion beeestablished including fac- ulty members as well as students. Detroit 'To Uwve Not' Jeiningway's Latest DET'ROIT, May 3. - (IP) The De- troit Library Commission decided to- day that Ernest Hemingway's novel of life in the Florida Keys, "To Have and Have Not," will be withdrawn from public-library circulation. The action came after Prosecutor Duncan C. MCCrea had informed Librarian Adam Strohm that if the Hemingway novel were not removed from the library shelves, Strohm and the Library Commission would be prosecuted for circulating obscene lit- erature.: Coal Institute Here Takes Up Iindtsry Continuing the Coal Utilization In stitute conference, keynoted yester- day by Dean Henry C. Anderson of the engineering college and J. E. To- bey of the Appalachian Coals, Inc., Sen. Burke Hits NLRB As Barrier' Board is Held Formidable Hurdle To Enduring Recovery Of Business M easter Is Blamied For Strike Outbreak WASHINGTON, May 3.-(P)--A, round-table conference on labor prob- lems at the annual meeting of the United' States Chamber of Commerce adopted a resolution today condemn- ing the National Labor Relations Act after hearing Sen. Edward R. Burke, Nebraska Democrat, call for resigna- tions of National Labor . Relations Board members. . The resolution held that the labor' act was "a formidable barrier to en- during business recovery," and urged Congress to investigate immediately] the administration of the act.' The resolution was passed unani- mously by the more than 400 business men present., Blamed For StrikesI It charged that the act had been responsible for the outbreak of strikes, had created irisk of protracted stop- page of work, brought on sit-down strikes, and in numerous other ways interfered with business. Burke, a frequent critic of Admin- istration policies, declared that Board members should quit their posts be- cause they had conceived their duty to be the "compulsory unionization of American workers." "Demanding a change in the board is not enough; there should be changes in the act itself," Burke add- ed. He urged that the law include a "clear declaration that it is the policy of the government to further the de- velopment of friendly and mutually fair labor relations." He also advo- cated that courts receive concurrent jurisdiction with the board on labor problems. Loss Of Work Seen1 "The administration of the Na- tional Labor Relations Act has been such as to snuff out the fires of; industry and send millions of workers into the line of the unemployed," the Senator charged. The Board he said, "considers it- self an agency whose chief aims it must be to bring about as quickly as possible compulsory unionization and' a national closed shop." The Senator said that there is "such a lack of confidence" in the Board that its members should resign at once. "If they have not the good sense to do that, they should be asked to step aside." Model Assembly Will Meet Here This Week-End Reorganization Of League Of Nations, Armaments Will Occupy Conference More than 150 students and teach- ers from 19 colleges and junior col- leges throughout the State will at- tend the Ilth annual Michigan Model Assembly of the League of Nations Friday and Saturday at the League, according to Alfred V. Boerner, Grad., Secretary-General. The two-lay meeting to be con- ducted in the nature of an interna- tional conference will be divided into four discussion groups to take up the matters of Peaceful Change, Reor- ganization of the League of Nations, Minorities and Rearmament. Norman Veenstra of Calvin College, Joseph A. Kitchin of the University, Donald Drummond of Western State and Edith Platzer of Wayne, respectively will be the student chairmen of these four forums. The principal speaker of the con- ference will be Dr. David Mitrany of the Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, N.J., who will talk at the dinner Friday night. Prof. Joseph R. Hayden, chairman of the political science department, will preside at the closing luncheon meeting Saturday to discuss the effect of niove e is in the East on Western socie ty, Marxism And Leninis l Topics Of Lecture Today Mussolini Welcomes Der Fuehrer To Rome Like Another Caesar But Underneath It All, Italians Cannot Forget The Austrian Ansehluss ROME, May 3.--WP)-Benito Mus- solini welcomed Adolf Hitler to Rome tonight with a dramatic display of friendship between the two fascist dictators. The nation greeted the German Fuehrer with gorgeous ceremony ri- valling those of the days of Ceasar in size, scope and grandeur. Underneath, a deep undercu~rent of uneasiness has run through Italy since Hitler absorbed Austria. Tonight there was an atmosphere of polite enthusiasm. Exactly at the appointed hour the German dictator's special train rolled into the station. It ended a tri- imphal but guarded all day journey of 460 miles from the Brenner Pass at 8:30 p.m. Ten minutes before Hitler's train arrived, a train of empty coaches pulled down the line to make certain the tracks were clear and safe: Uniformed German police, escort- ed about the station by fascist offi- cers, were told the identities of all non-uniformed persons within the station area., King Vittorio Emanuele and Prem- ier Mussolini stood together on the platform beneath a great swastika outlined in colored neon lights. Mus- I France Decrees MoreWeapons As Hitler,.Duce Start Meetings Daladier Orders Bigger Army, Navy, Airforce For Nation's Protection Premnier Seeks More Soldiers And Sailors PARIS, May 3.-(P)-France today met a new show of Italian-German solidarity by ordering a bigger army, navy and airforce. . The National Defense cabinet of Premier Edouard Daladier geared the wheels of French economy and fi- nance to a bigger and stronger war machine by decrees issued just as Adolf Hitler was approaching Rome for his visit to Premier Mussolini. The long-planned decrees, finally announced on the day of Hitler's trip, soliri wore on' his militia corporal's uniform the order of the German eagle which Hitler had conferred upon him. Hitler appeared in the doorway of his coach clad in a Nazi khaki uniform. His only decorations were an iron cross on his sleeve and the emblem of an honorary corporal of the fascist militia-an award from Mussolini last September. Stadium Bond Surrender Is' Aim Of Group Alumni To Ask Exchange Of $240 In Grid Tickets For Each_$500 Bond. An attempt to induce holders of stadium bonds to surrender them in return for season football tickets for the next 12 years was being made yesterday b: a committee of alumni volunteers, The University's bonded athletic indebtedness amounts to $1- 147,000. After approval had been received from the Board of Regents and Board in Control of Physical Education, let- ters were mailed to 1,651 bondholders. They are aimed at persons who pur- chased bonds "largely because of their interest in the University" rather* than at individuals who consider the bonds a needed source of income, it was said. For each bond to the amount of $500 surrendered, the donoi will be given two season tickets for all home football games through 1949. These are valued at about $240. Seats will be between the 30 yard lines. On the committee, which has established headquarters in the Gene- see Bank building at Flint and will work independently of the University, are R. Spencer Bishop, Flint; Ralph D4. Snyder, Chicago; J. Kingsley Gould, New York City, and James K. Watkins of Detroit. Since the stadium bonds were issued originally. $353,000 has been used to- ward retirement of the $1,500,000 totial. Chiniese Envoy To Speak Here A Baseball Team Tr ips Western In Ninth, 5 To. 4 Smick Blasts Out Double To Mark Up Michigan's Second Straight Win By BUD BENJAMIN KALAMAZOO, May 3.-(Special to The Daily)--There weren't any yawn- ing right field tennis courts here to- day for Danny Smick to dump one of his long distance clouts, so he broke precedent and blasted a ninth inning double into left to drive home the winning run and give Michigan a 5 to 4 victory over Western State Teaciers College. Capt. Merle :Kremer was on second base when Dangerous Dan pickled one of Geno Selmo's favorite fast balls in the final frame, and Butch sailed home in good order as the ball drop- ped in a clump of woods in the dis- tant garden. It was the Wolverines second straight victory after a disastrous opening flare of five straight defeats. They can stretch the streak to three at home tomorrow, Toledo University providing the opposition. Aggressive baseball again spelled victory for the Varsity. They spot- ted the 'Teachers four runs in the first four frames but surged back in the closing innings to whittle down the lead and finally break the ice on Smick's grand- slam.. Three pitchers worked for Michi- gan with southpaw Herm Fishman chalking up his second victory in four days. Bucko Smith started, gave way to Ed Anrdronik in the eighth, Fishman entering in the same frame to quench a budding rally and finish. Smith yielded all the runs during his tenure, but the coup d'etat came on a mispitch to Berl Mershon, hill- topper first sacker. The bases were loaded in the State fourth, two were out, and Mershon up. Burt chose a a low inside ball, but his aim was poor, the ball came in a little high, (Continued on rage 3) Concert Baind Plays Over NBC Today The University Concert Band, 851 strong, will give a half-hour broad- cast over the Blue Network of the National Broadcasting Company from 2:30 to 3 p.m. today. The program will originate in the Macabee Audi- torium in Det'oit. Ernest Jones, ':38 will announce the program, which will be entirely student-organized and presented. It will be relayed to the NBC through the facilities of station WXYZ, and is being sponsored by the NBC in con- junction with National Wtus Week. New Forestry Officers Chosen For Next Year Officers for the Forestry Club for next year were announced yesterday Karl Leonhardt, '30F&C, was elected WASHINGTON, May 3.-G(P)- The Administration's $1,156,000,- 000 naval expansion program re- ceived a thumping 2 to 1 endorse- ment in the Senate today. emphasized the importance of the Rome-Berlin tieup despite the friend- ship agreement between Italy and' Britain and Mussolini's negotiations with France for a similar accord. Daladier, who in the years before he becamne Premier won the confi- dence of the armed forces as head of the Defense Ministry, issued the edict calling for more sailors, soldiers and aviators. He opened a new 'credit of 4,712,- 500,000 francs (about $141,375,00) for national defense and said it would be used to strengthen the nation's mil- tary and naval manpower. This was in addition to the previous 1938. de- fense budget of 25,000,000,000 francs (about $750,000,000). The step was part of a series of de- crees which boosted France's annual tax bill by 4,000,000,000 f an s ($120,- 000,000) through a'flat eight per ceht increase in all direct and hidden taxes. In addition the Naval Ministry was authorized to begin construction be- fore Dec. 31, 1939, of two battleships, one cruiser, seven submarines, five oil tankers and a number of auxiliary craft. The navy was empowered to spend, from 1938 to 1942, a total of 5,000,000,000 francs ($150,000,000) 'oi ship construction And purchase of war stocks. War manpower would be increased by incorporating an unstated number of reserve officers into the regulW army, boosting the navy from 69,500 to 72,500 men and the airforce from 44,000 to 52,500 noncommissioned of- ficers and men. Two new battalions of Sengalese sharpshooters, among the best of colonial troops, would be created. Even as the nation learned of the financial and defense measures, the Premier and his ministers worked on a second series of decrees to improve France's armed forces. Fairley To Talk O Goethe Here University Lecture Will Be At 4:15_Today Prof. Barker Fairley of the Univer- sity of Toronto, one of the most prom- inent students of German literature, will give a University lecture at 4:15 p.m. today in the Natural Science Auditorium on "Goethe and Frau von Stein." Professor Fairley is considered one of the world's leading authorities on Goethe, and his work has entirely changed the concept of that poet in the English-speaking world. Frau von Stein, about whom he will speak to- day, was for many years a source of inspiration to Goethe. Professor Fairley was born in York- shire, England, and received his Doc- tor's degree from the University of Leipzig, Germany. He taught at the University of Alberta and at the University of Manchester,dEngland before going to Toronto, where he is at present chairman of the depart- ment of German. R.O.T.C. Freshmen Win Medals For Best Drills Significance Of China's Resistance Is Topic "Significance of China's Resistance to Japanese Aggression" will be the topic of Dr. C. T. Wong ,Chinese am- basfador to the United States, who will speak at 4:15 p.m. tomorrow in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Dr. Wong will give his address in answer to many requests from his Ann Arbor friends, Prof. J. Raleigh Nelson, counselor to foreign students, stated. He spoke in Detroit Sunday at the Masonic Temple, and came to Ann Arbor to visit friends. At noon today, Dr. Wong will speak at the Rotary Club luncheon. He has been district governor of his province and has been prominent in inter- nationalsRotary work, Professor Nel- son said. He will be entertained at dinner by the Chinese Club. Tomorrow,' Dr. Wong will be the guest of Mr. and Mrs. H. B. Earhart, of Geddes Rd. for dinner. Mr. Wong is a former student of the Univer- sity, taking graduate work in 1917 and 1918. He received his doctor's de-